Viewers saw a dazzling 81-minute crash course in the Bollywood genre .

Viewers saw a dazzling 81-minute crash course in the Bollywood genre . Cannes celebrated Bollywood with the midnight screening of a specially prepared montage of great moments in Hindi musical cinema that didn\'t quite get the audience dancing in the aisles. \"Bollywood: The World\'s Greatest Love Story\" was put together over the past year at the behest of festival director Thierry Fremaux to make up for a perennial dearth of Indian films in competition at the world\'s biggest film event.
\"You can dance during the film if you want,\" Fremaux told the black-tie audience, and for encouragement a glamourous posse of Mumbai film stars was on hand, some of whom danced their way up the red carpet under a full moon.
But from the balcony seats, it looked as if no one took up the invitation, and indeed a number of mainly older viewers were seen leaving early.
For those who stayed, the reward was a dazzling 81-minute crash course in the Bollywood genre, including two minutes of obligatory wet-sari scenes, directed by Sherkar Kapur and snappily edited by US documentary maker Jeff Zimbalist.
Kapur, a Cannes jury member last year, said the idea for the project came from Fremaux, who had been impressed by audiences dancing at the London musical \"Bombay Dreams\" which Kapur co-produced.
\"The audience (in Cannes) should see why over a billion people are having a love affair with this kind of cinema,\" he told the Hollywood Reporter trade journal in an interview published this week.
\"It\'s been quite a delicate process to do this, including clips from almost 100 films from black-and-white to today\'s cinema.\"