This is un-bee-lievable!

A Brooklyn woman called a pest controller after finding a few bees buzzing around her bedroom — and he uncovered a hive of 35,000 living in the ceiling above her bed.

“It felt like it was the National Geographic Channel,” said Stuart Mulzac, 26, who shares the East Flatbush apartment with his mother, Cherisse.

“It was almost like we were in a movie like ‘Attack of the Bees.’ I couldn’t believe it.”

The bees mysteriously began showing up in the East 21st Street apartment this year, and Cherisse Mulzac called in bee rescuer Mickey Hegedus last Wednesday after one of them stung an allergic neighbor.

Even the third-generation beekeeper was stunned at what he found. He had to cut a 4-foot hole in the ceiling just to get past all the honeycomb, then found that tens of thousands of the insects had formed a massive colony in the small space above.

“I was amazed, just amazed. It was phenomenal!” said Hegedus, 52, who lives in Bedford-Stuyvesant. “I expected to find half of that — at the most.”

Chunks of honeycomb came crashing down from the ceiling, and honey dripped down the walls as the bee expert set about sucking up the precious honey bees with a special vacuum.

Cherisse and Stuart watched in amazement.

“When you see so many, you just feel like they’re crawling on you! It’s spooky that they could live here all these years and we had no idea — you can’t even hear them,” said Stuart, who works as a parking valet.

After the seven-hour removal process, Hegedus took all the bees back home with him.

But he left the family with a sweet gift — 70 pounds of delicious honey.

“It’s literally 100 percent all natural, probably better than the stuff you can get in the store. Homemade,” Stuart said.

“At the store, you can’t even get it with the quote unquote ‘pulp,’ ” he added, referring to the dead bees that pepper the containers of honey now filling their fridge.

Hegedus kept a little for himself, too. He says honey made by bees in the city is actually far better than that made by their country counterparts, who, unlike their urban brethren, are usually sucking on nectar from pesticide-sprayed plants.

“It’s delicious. Nice and light and clean,” Hegedus said.

He thinks the bees likely sneaked into the Mulzacs’ roof through some missing bricks and could have been quietly building the hive for years — although they may have just had an especially frisky spring.

“It’s been such a favorable spring for bees, with flash rain, sunshine, rain, sunshine, rain,” he said. “Nectar has been flowing so much, they were able to build a huge, huge colony.”