"We didn't think of our movies as underground or commercial or art                 or porn; they were a little of all of those, but ultimately they were just 'our kind                 of movie.'" -- Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol was a remarkably                 prolific filmmaker, creating more than 100 movies and nearly 500 of the film                 portraits known as Screen Tests. And yet relatively little has                 been written about this body of work. Warhol withdrew his films from circulation in                 the early 1970s and it was only after his death in 1987 that they began to be                 restored and shown again. With  Our Kind of Movie Douglas Crimp                 offers the first single-authored book about the full range of Andy Warhol's films in                 forty years -- and the first since the films were put back into circulation. In six                 essays, Crimp examines individual films, including Blow Job, Screen Test                 No. 2, and Warhol's cinematic masterpiece The Chelsea                 Girls (perhaps the most commercially successful avant-garde film of all                 time), as well as groups of films related thematically or otherwise -- films of                 seductions in confined places, films with scenarios by Ridiculous Theater playwright                 Ronald Tavel. Crimp argues that Warhol's films make visible new, queer forms of                 sociality. Crimp does not view these films as cinéma-vérité documents of Warhol's                 milieu, or as camera-abetted voyeurism, but rather as exemplifying Warhol's                 inventive cinema techniques, his collaborative working methods, and his superstars'                 unique capabilities. Thus, if Warhol makes visible new social relations, Crimp                 writes, that visibility is inextricable from his making a new kind of cinema. In                  Our Kind of Movie Crimp shows how Warhol's films allow us to see                 against the grain -- to see differently and to see a different world, a world of                 difference.