Sunburst Viral- Latest News on Celebrities, gossip, TV,  music and movies
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Featured News
  • Celebrity
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Gossips
  • TV
  • Comics
  • Books
  • Gaming
  • Home
  • Featured News
  • Celebrity
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Gossips
  • TV
  • Comics
  • Books
  • Gaming
No Result
View All Result
Sunburst Viral- Latest News on Celebrities, gossip, TV,  music and movies
No Result
View All Result

Montreal filmmaker documents race to save vanishing Chinatowns across North America

by Sunburst Viral
3 years ago
in Featured News
0
Home Featured News
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Spread the love


Chinatowns across North America don’t just share a similar look — they also face similar existential threats and David-versus-Goliath-like battles for survival.

Whether it’s residents of New York City’s Chinatown protesting a proposed mega jail in their community, or Montreal’s Chinese diaspora fighting to save heritage buildings or struggling to keep family restaurants alive during COVID-19, these common threads are a recurring motif of Karen Cho’s documentary “Big Fight in Little Chinatown.”

Cho, a fifth-generation Chinese Canadian with roots in the Chinatowns of Montreal and Vancouver, documents how these urban pockets of Chinese culture across North America are facing similar pressures from gentrification. In an interview, Cho said the neighbourhoods are prime targets for redevelopment due to their age and proximity to downtown, but also to what she calls “the intersection of racism and urban planning.”

Urban renewal projects, she said, are disproportionately located in racialized or immigrant communities.

Story continues below advertisement

“Again and again and again, wherever the Chinatown would be, these are neighbourhoods where freeways are driven through them, light rails and stadiums dropped onto them, prisons put into them,” she said in a phone interview.

“(These are) the priorities or the choices that the city makes of who gets to stay and who gets displaced.”

Cho’s hometown of Montreal is a focal point of the documentary, which she said wasn’t part of her original plan. She had long been concerned about the luxury condo towers sprouting up around Montreal’s Chinatown gates, but her initial conception was to focus on the bigger Chinatowns on the continent, in places like Vancouver and New York.


Click to play video: 'Film documents fight to save Chinatowns'

5:18
Film documents fight to save Chinatowns


That changed in 2021, when news broke that a developer purchased buildings on one of the most historic blocks of Montreal’s Chinatown — including the Wings building, named for a noodle factory that has long operated there.

Story continues below advertisement

“The Wings noodle building got bought, and I had a really tough time,” she said. “I couldn’t reconcile this idea that I was gonna film the erasure of my own Chinatown.”

Cho was a member of the Montreal Chinatown working group, formed in response to development pressures. In early 2022, the activists won a significant battle when the province signed an official notice to grant heritage status to the “institutional core” of Chinatown as well as to two of its best-known buildings, including the Wings factory. That status protects buildings from being demolished or significantly altered without permission.

She said the move was a good first step in protecting what’s left of Montreal’s Chinatown, which she said was “one condo project away” from complete erasure after decades of urban redevelopment projects that had already led to the demolition of every building where her family had ever lived or worked.

However, Cho’s film makes it clear that saving Chinatowns is about more than preserving buildings or their facades.

Trending Now

  • Body of missing Ontario toddler found outdoors on daycare property

  • Nova Scotia wildfires: Ottawa ready to assist as blaze burns near Halifax

Much of her documentary shows the day-to-day lives of Chinatown residents in places like Montreal, Vancouver and New York: business owners preparing food to sell, young people rehearsing a dragon dance, seniors gathering in parks. She said she wanted to show that Chinatowns are not just places selling souvenirs and dim sum to tourists, but also providing important community spaces, activities and culture for the people who live there.

Story continues below advertisement


Click to play video: 'Vancouver Chinatown condo project debate'

2:07
Vancouver Chinatown condo project debate


Equally important, she said, was to break the “tourist facade” and tell the story from the residents’ point of view. “I follow a lot of intergenerational businesses, people that have been there for a long time, but instead of us as tourists looking through the shop window, it’s like they’re actually looking from the inside out to see the changes in their neighbourhood.”

Cho’s film tour has taken her across North America, with stops in Montreal, Vancouver, Winnipeg and Los Angeles. Stops include a showing at the Edmonton Chinatown Multi-Cultural Centre on Sunday and at Hot Docs cinema in Toronto on May 30. The documentary is also scheduled for broadcast on TVO and Radio-Canada.

She said most of her screenings take place in Chinatowns, where she’s had the opportunity to speak with community leaders about their efforts to preserve their districts. The response, she said, has left her hopeful.

Story continues below advertisement

“There is a 150-year tradition of resistance in those neighbourhoods, and I saw that firsthand,” she said. Seeing those “pockets of resistance” has reminded her of the strength within those communities, despite the odds stacked against them.

“Chinatown really is like this kind of blade of grass that grows in the cement,” she said. “You know, it’s not supposed to be there, but it’s thriving.”

&copy 2023 The Canadian Press





Source link

Tags: Americacelebrity newsChinatownsDocumentsFilmmakerhollywood gossipshollywood newslatest hollywood newsMontrealNorthRaceSavevanishing
Previous Post

Brian Hibbs, Erik Larsen & Everyone On Image Comics’ Switch To Lunar

Next Post

These 10 Stars Shaded Their Exes

Related Posts

Romy Mars Says Babysitter Gave Her Weed When She Was Just 11 Years Old
Featured News

Romy Mars Says Babysitter Gave Her Weed When She Was Just 11 Years Old

by Sunburst Viral
March 22, 2026
Trump Shares ‘SNL UK’ Clip Mocking Keir Starmer & Himself
Featured News

Trump Shares ‘SNL UK’ Clip Mocking Keir Starmer & Himself

by Sunburst Viral
March 22, 2026
Savannah Guthrie on Nancy Guthrie’s Disappearance
Featured News

Savannah Guthrie on Nancy Guthrie’s Disappearance

by Sunburst Viral
March 22, 2026
What The Critics Are Saying
Featured News

What The Critics Are Saying

by Sunburst Viral
March 22, 2026
DeAndre Hopkins Talks NFL Future, Down to Reunite With Kyler Murray in Minnesota
Featured News

DeAndre Hopkins Talks NFL Future, Down to Reunite With Kyler Murray in Minnesota

by Sunburst Viral
March 22, 2026
Next Post
These 10 Stars Shaded Their Exes

These 10 Stars Shaded Their Exes

GET THE FREE NEWSLETTER

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Children’s and Family — ‘The Muppets Mayhem’ – TVLine

Children’s and Family — ‘The Muppets Mayhem’ – TVLine

November 2, 2023
Watch: Guillermo del Toro’s ‘The Perfect Pour’ Short for Patrón Tequila

Watch: Guillermo del Toro’s ‘The Perfect Pour’ Short for Patrón Tequila

March 19, 2026
British youngsters’s e-book illustrator and graphic novelist Raymond Briggs dies, aged 88

British youngsters’s e-book illustrator and graphic novelist Raymond Briggs dies, aged 88

August 11, 2022
How to unlock fast travel locations in Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown

How to unlock fast travel locations in Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown

January 18, 2024
Don Spencer now: What happened to the Australian children’s entertainer and Play School presenter?

Don Spencer now: What happened to the Australian children’s entertainer and Play School presenter?

September 19, 2024
On the time of their divorce, Depp agreed to pay Heard  million, which she promised to donate to the ACLU & to Kids’s Hospital Los Angeles, with .5 million going to every. Dougherty testified that the ACLU truly solely obtained .3 million. : leisure

On the time of their divorce, Depp agreed to pay Heard $7 million, which she promised to donate to the ACLU & to Kids’s Hospital Los Angeles, with $3.5 million going to every. Dougherty testified that the ACLU truly solely obtained $1.3 million. : leisure

April 28, 2022
Romy Mars Says Babysitter Gave Her Weed When She Was Just 11 Years Old

Romy Mars Says Babysitter Gave Her Weed When She Was Just 11 Years Old

March 22, 2026
Taylor Paul Reacts to Doug Mason’s Message After Cancellation

Taylor Paul Reacts to Doug Mason’s Message After Cancellation

March 22, 2026
‘iZombie’ & ‘Supernatural’ Actress Was 51

‘iZombie’ & ‘Supernatural’ Actress Was 51

March 22, 2026
New TOMB RAIDER Set Video Shows Sophie Turner’s Lara Croft Locked and Loaded — GeekTyrant

New TOMB RAIDER Set Video Shows Sophie Turner’s Lara Croft Locked and Loaded — GeekTyrant

March 22, 2026
Chappell Roan hits back at claims she made Jude Law’s daughter cry and blames security

Chappell Roan hits back at claims she made Jude Law’s daughter cry and blames security

March 22, 2026
Trump Shares ‘SNL UK’ Clip Mocking Keir Starmer & Himself

Trump Shares ‘SNL UK’ Clip Mocking Keir Starmer & Himself

March 22, 2026
  • Home
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us
SUNBURST VIRAL

Copyright © 2022 - Sunburst Viral.
Sunburst Viral is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Featured News
  • Celebrity
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Gossips
  • TV
  • Comics
  • Books
  • Gaming

Copyright © 2022 - Sunburst Viral.
Sunburst Viral is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Go to mobile version