Why didn't they make the movie Borat properly Kazakh?
In the film, Borat is in a "Kazakh" village. This village is in Romania, and you can see that it's Romania; the village looks Romanian, not Kazakh. When I couldn't watch the film and just saw these images, I immediately thought of Romania. And the music isn't Kazakh at all, but Romanian. Why couldn't they make the music properly Kazakh, and why couldn't they film a village in Kazakhstan?
Was that intentional?
The village was pretty angry when they saw the film and even wanted to kill him. Are they still angry with him? And why were they so angry? It was all just a joke and definitely not meant to attack the real person. He didn't mean it personally.
The average US american (and for which the film was made primarily) does not know where Kazakhstan or where Romania lies and could not distort the population or even music.
So it was just laziness? The actor and maker of the film is not an American and they must be a bit smarter than Americans because they do a movie where the actually funny (or sad) is that Americans really believe it is there.