Bollywood films have emerged as the second most requested genre by one million digital customers of a
leading American channel's International Movies On Demand (IMOD) service.
"Due to the success of this campaign, we wanted to expand our international offerings. We launched IMOD
earlier this year," said Suzanne Giuliani, director, public relations, Time Warner Cable of New York and New
Jersey, of its team-up with BODVOD.
"We don't disclose financials but we feel it has been a successful partnership," she said in an email
interview to IANS about her company's partnership with BODVOD, the first US video on demand (VOD)
service offering Bollywood and South Asian content through 30 distribution partners including Time
Warner.
Apart from Bollywood fare, the channel currently offers Asia Extreme, Chinese, French, Italian, Japanese
and Spanish movies. But "we encourage our entire customer base to learn about our IMOD offerings as
these films appeal to many different communities", Giuliani said.
This is part of the company's "targeted marketing plan and general marketing plan", she said, noting that all
foreign films are sub-titled including about a dozen Bollywood films currently available on the IMOD Channel
500.
Asked how the films on offer are chosen, Giuliani said: "We take the lead from our content provider as to
what films should be offered. We also encourage providers to include films that have performed well and are
of broad interest to the community."
Given the success of Bollywood fare, Time Warner plans to "continue to explore expanding our offerings of
Bollywood and South Asian films as this audience has grown".
Giuliani would not comment on competitors offering similar fare in North America saying: "We focus on
attracting unique fare that appeals to a large audience and is comparable to films available through other
outlets."
With a record number of Indian films reaching blockbuster status in America in 2006, the channel started
offering an expanded selection of Bollywood and other South Asian films from Nov 1 with "Rang de
Basanti", India's official entry to the Academy Awards premiering later this month.
India's highest-grossing film of 2006, the Adlabs sci-fi action thriller "Krrish", will also make its on-demand
premiere when it debuts Dec 8. Shot in Singapore, the groundbreaking special effects in the Hrithik Roshan
smash have made it Bollywood's first super hero blockbuster.
Other hit titles to be released this year include "Bluffmaster", "Swades", "15 Park Ave" and "Taxi No.
9211".
More hits keep coming in early 2007 with the much-anticipated premieres of Shah Rukh Khan's action
blockbuster "Don", the New York set comedy Jaan-E-Mann, and the epic Moghul-era romance "Umrao
Jaan" starring Aishwarya Rai and Abhishek Bachchan.
After two years of steady growth, with monthly transactions jumping 150 percent from 2005, BODVOD has
signed content deals with two of Bollywood's largest studios - UTV and Adlabs - and will be the exclusive
video-on-demand supplier of their blockbuster hits across the US.
Saturday, November 25, 2006 13:39 IST