
K-11 follows Raymond Saxx Jr. (Goran Visnjic), a powerful record producer who wakes from a drug-induced blackout to find himself locked up and classified "K-11." Plunged into a nightmarish world ruled by a transsexual diva named Mousey (Kate del Castillo), Raymond is truly a fish out of water. Complicating matters are a troubled young transgender named Butterfly (Portia Doubleday), a predatory child molester (Tommy 'Tiny' Lister) and the ruthless Sheriff's Deputy, Lt. Johnson... (Full plot summary below)
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K-11 follows Raymond Saxx Jr. (Goran Visnjic), a powerful record producer who wakes from a drug-induced blackout to find himself locked up and classified "K-11." Plunged into a nightmarish world ruled by a transsexual diva named Mousey (Kate del Castillo), Raymond is truly a fish out of water. Complicating matters are a troubled young transgender named Butterfly (Portia Doubleday), a predatory child molester (Tommy 'Tiny' Lister) and the ruthless Sheriff's Deputy, Lt. Johnson (D.B. Sweeney). Ray's struggle to contact the outside world and regain his freedom seems impossible, but he must learn to navigate this new power structure if he is ever going survive and be in control of his life again.
Leave your thoughts about K-11.
| Film Festival TodayVictoria AlexanderWho knew there was a special K-11 inmate division for LGBT criminals to run the dormitory, take drugs, dress up and have sex with the guards? |
| Blu-ray.comBrian OrndorfK-11 is far too messy and unfocused, growing more unbearable and baffling with every directorial and editorial mistake Stewart makes. |
| Birth.Movies.Death.Jordan HoffmanStuck in that valley of being bad, but not so bad that it's actually good. |
| Cinema SightWesley LovellAn interesting, if deeply flawed film about the backroom machinations of a gays-only ward at a local prison. |
| Slant MagazineAbhimanyu DasIt 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. |
| Village VoiceAaron HillisMore 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—exploitation laughs one minute, somber tragedy the next. |
| New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisTo borrow RuPaul’s delightful catchphrase, the only possible response to a project like this is to advise it to “sashay away.” |
| The Hollywood ReporterStephen DaltonFull of overwrought campery and vicious drag queens, K-11 feels in places like a deranged John Waters remake of "The Shawshank Redemption." |
| Los Angeles TimesGary GoldsteinK-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. What's left is a dreary jailhouse drama that somehow managed to imprison a few notable actors within its lurid walls. |
| New York Daily NewsJoe NeumaierPoints for niche audaciousness, but that’s all. |