The song's music video was directed by
Brett Ratner who, at the time, had previously directed other hip hop music videos, including "
Tonight's da Night" by
Redman in 1993 and "Nuttin' but Love" by
Heavy D & the Boyz in 1994. In a 1997 interview with MTV news reporter
Serena Altschul, Ratner revealed that Raekwon came up with the video's treatment.
Joseph Kahn was the
cinematographer. The video cost about $800,000 to make. The video begins with a fictional
breaking news bulletin alerting of a massive swarm of
killer bees converging on
Manhattan via
New York City's four other boroughs,
Brooklyn,
Queens,
The Bronx and
Staten Island. A news anchorwoman then goes on to reveal that
Ol' Dirty Bastard is atop a Manhattan skyscraper surrounded by police helicopters and police with guns drawn, ready to jump, with his finger on a detonator. The anchorwoman then mentions that there just may be a connection between these two seemingly coincidental events. Despite being mentioned, Ol' Dirty Bastard doesn't actually appear in the video. According to Brett Ratner, ODB was uninterested in appearing since he had no verse on the song, so he left the set before filming and a stand-in was used in his place.
Inspectah Deck is climbing on the side of the building directly beneath ODB. When ODB jumps off to evade police, Deck runs down the side of the building, reaches the ground, and catches him. As people are scrambling in the street below,
Method Man and others ride on motorcycles through the chaos trying to outrun the fireball behind them. When he finishes rapping it explodes and Meth is flung far away. The killer bees are seen passing by them, and go down the sewers and arrive at
Cappadonna's lair.
U-God is seen in a burning forest, hanging on a tree with a few doppelgängers. The killer bees then travel across the water to an
Alcatraz-esque prison, where they bust a hole in the wall in the shape of the Wu-Tang symbol.
RZA is wearing artificial wings, and appears to be walking to the hole in order to jump out and glide to safety. Instead, he transforms into a swarm of bees and kills the guard. The scene switches to space, and
GZA is watching over the Earth as an infinitely wise, God-like figure. During GZA's verse, a brief scene from the 1915 film
The Birth of a Nation is shown. He makes a gesture with his hands and sends the killer bees back down into Manhattan. They conglomerate to form
Masta Killa, who is standing on a tower in the shape of the Wu-Tang Clan symbol. People gather around him as if he was preaching. He forms a spark in his hands that enters all of their eyes, symbolizing the exposure to "true hip-hop". He then fades away in the form of killer bees, who travel to a club, where
Ghostface Killah and
Raekwon are rapping and
Quincy Jones and
Kidada Jones are in the audience. After they finish, the crowd transforms into a mass of bees that travel into the sky, forming the W in front of the moon. ==Song order==