Commando303 wrote:
Actually, just from personal experience, it seems that the few American people I know who do watch Indian films, watch the "shitty" ones, and not the more "art-house" works. For these people (not "Americans, in general," but the people I mentioned knowing), song-and-dance sequences are a fun bit of film-making not common in modern American cinema, while something from Ram Gopal Varma seems neither novel nor brilliant.
For a lot of people if they see Indian films its a novelty, or, at worst, something to be laughed at. Hence, those clips of Chiranjeevi and Rajinikanth floating around on YouTube

As for the ridiculousness of Karan Johar, I've always felt that if K3G was an intentionally over-the-top
parody of Indian films, then its bloody brilliant.
Mr_Khiladi wrote:
I think sometimes the films India promotes are not always the the films the rest of the world wishes to see (e.g. Andaaz) and the films Indian audiences reject are sometimes the films that would be appreciated in the west.
For example at a film festival in London I went to, the films Yahaan and Hari Om went down well with the western audience. These films were probably flops in India and are not your typical Hindi cinema.
Iranian cinema has made an impact on Western film festivalgoers and avid film fans with arthouse films. But those films are generally not too popular in Iran itself. Similarly, the Indian films that have gotten attention in the West are those by people like Satyajit Ray and Adoor Gopalakrishnan.