Release Date K-11 Mar 15, 2013 Limited
If You Like this movie you can streaming K-11 movie without downloading HERE
Actors For K-11
Goran Visnjic,Kate del Castillo,D.B. Sweeney,Portia Doubleday,Jason Mewes,Tommy 'Tiny' Lister,Cameron Stewart,Sonya Eddy,Luis Moncada,Craig Owens,Tiffany Mulheron,P.J. Byrne,Paul Zies,Tara Buck,Lou Beatty Jr.,Billy Morrison,Ralph Cole Jr.,Markus Redmond,Frank Ross,Tim De ZarnGenres K-11 : Mystery & Suspense,Drama
Visitor Ranting & Critics For K-11
User Ranting K-11 : 3.8User Percentage For K-11 : 70 %
User Count Like for K-11 : 1,008
All Critics Ranting For K-11 : 3.8
All Critics Count For K-11 : 10
All Critics Percentage For K-11 : 10 %
If You Like this movie you can streaming K-11 movie without downloading HERE
Movie Overview For K-11
A record producer comes around after binging on drink and drugs. He finds himself in a section of the Los Angeles County Jail reserved for homosexuals, which is ruled by a transsexual named Mousey.TagLine K-11
Trailer For K-11
Review For K-11
A sordid prison drama that struts an unsteady line between full-on camp and "Oz"-style Darwinism.Jeannette Catsoulis-New York Times
"K-11" has the makings of a cult movie campfest but little of the authentic wit, edge or outré vision it would take to get there.
Gary Goldstein-Los Angeles Times
Points for niche audaciousness, but that's all.
Joe Neumaier-New York Daily News
Like an on-the-nose parody of Lee Daniels directing an episode of Oz, K-11 is a pulpy, tone-deaf mess of confused directorial intent ...
Aaron Hillis-Village Voice
Pulpy prison yarn lacks conviction.
Stephen Dalton-Hollywood Reporter
Stuck in that valley of being bad, but not so bad that it's actually good.
Jordan Hoffman-Badass Digest
I'm not quite sure why Stewart felt compelled to make this movie, but to her credit I guess, she commits to the story she's telling, as lurid, unpleasant and ultimately pointless as it may be.
Ethan Alter-Television Without Pity
Jules Stewart makes a confident directorial debut. Although the screenplay comes perilously close at times to sensationalizing or stereotyping the characters, Stewart wisely resists.
Fr. Chris Carpenter-Echo Magazine
It careens from one tonal extreme to the next, uncertain about whether it wants to be a gritty drama, camp artifact, or violent prison-sploitation flick.
Abhimanyu Das-Slant Magazine
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