He may have just ‘thoda thoda\' (little) understanding of Indian cinema, but Academy Award-winning star Colin Firth is confident that the growing confluence between Bollywood and Hollywood will prove beneficial for both. \"Well, I understand Indian cinema ‘thoda thoda\'! My perception is very simple — the world is filled with creative and intelligent people, so every industry is meant to be blessed with a growing future and so is Indian cinema,\" Firth said. \"We see the [Indian] films in festivals, and we are glad to share the platform with them [Indian filmmakers]. They are also coming up with good and real cinema,\" he said. Of late, the Indian entertainment industry has witnessed an increased number of co-productions and collaborations with foreign studios. Firth, 51, whose Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy released in India on Friday, feels \"it is beneficial\". But is he game to work in an Indian collaboration? \"Let\'s see, nothing on my mind on this yet. If I am approached, will definitely think about it,\" said Firth, who has India on his wishlist of travel destinations. \"India is a very vast country, I haven\'t been there but there are lot of places to be explored, lot of delicacies to be tasted ... Indian heritage ... phew huge list ... one of the seven wonders [Taj Mahal],\" he added. In Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, the big screen adaptation of John le Carre\'s iconic 1974 spy novel of the same name, he plays a spy. The movie follows a hunt for a Soviet double agent at the top of a British secret service. \"One of the frightening things about the film is taking on an adaptation of the famous book, and it\'s dense. Obviously, I\'ve read it now, more than once. ...The book has lot of information that\'s conveyed through complex dialogues, and a lot of detail. The difficult task was to pare it down while maintaining the essence of the intrigue. It\'s amazing to me how well that worked,\" he said.