Films at the Gate (2006-present)
ABOUT
Since 2006, every summer, a vacant lot near Boston’s Chinatown Gate is transformed into a free, outdoor theater, showing Kung-Fu and classic Chinese-language films. Films at the Gate is a collaborative project of Boston Street Lab, film curator Jean Lukitsh, and the Asian Community Development Corporation. The series seeks to:
- improve awareness of Boston’s Chinatown as a site of cultural activity
- restore a tradition of shared, public experience of Chinese-language films in Chinatown,
- provide temporary community use of Chinatown’s underutilized spaces,
- draw foot-traffic to neighborhood restaurants, and make downtown Boston a destination beyond the working hours.
Visit www.filmstthegate.org where we maintain an archive of years past. Or see this year’s film schedule at ACDC.
Over the years that we produced Films at the Gate, we wrote about it on the Street Lab Blog.
A TRADITION OF FILM IN CHINATOWN
- Boston Phoenix “Best 2010“
- Sampan [9/10/2010] “Fifth Annual Films at the Gate maintains Chinatown tradition, builds community”
- Jay’s Movie Blog [9/2/10] “This Week in Tickets: 23 August 2010 to 29 August 2010.”
- Boston Globe [8/22/10] “Open-air fest a kick..” by Taylor Adams
- Natural Resources Defense Council on Films at the Gate
- Pedestrian Friendly [8/27/09] “An urban vacant lot blossoms, if only briefly”
- Boston Globe [8/26/09] “A Weedy Lot Blossoms” by Yvonne Abraham
- Boston Zest “Dinner and a Movie Al Freco Style”
- Huffington Post [9/1/09] “Village Green: Boston’s Asian Community brings Fun, Education, and Affordability to Chinatown.
- Boston Phoenix [8/30/09] “Event Picks”
- Boston.com [8/27/09] “Go To It: Hot Events Around the Hub”
- Bostonist.com [8/27/09] “Thursday Happenings”
- The Tufts Daily [9/4/08]
- Boston Globe [9/3/08] “Everybody is kung fu fighting”
- Boston Phoenix [9/2/08] “Giving voice to Red Heroine”
- Sampan [2007]
- WBUR [9/15/06] (listen)
- Boston Globe [8/20/06] “Kung fu back on the screen”
BLOG POSTS ABOUT FILMS AT THE GATE
Thursday’s Film: Police Story (1985)
Films at the Gate continues with POLICE STORY at 7:30 PM. Details and directions here. POLICE STORY was Jackie Chan’s first big contemporary hit and it set a new standard for modern action films. Jackie is a heroic cop framed by a mobster and forced to take revenge....
Wednesday’s film: My Young Auntie (1981)
Films at the Gate opens a five night run with MY YOUNG AUNTIE at 7:30 PM. Details and directions here. MY YOUNG AUNTIE is a kung fu smackdown and wacky comedy showcasing Kara Hui as a young woman who enters a marriage of convenience with an elderly benefactor to...
Films at the Gate is back.
Wednesday, Sept. 3 - Sunday, Sept. 7, 2008 For five nights this September, for the third year in a row, a vacant lot near Boston’s Chinatown Gate will become a free, outdoor theater, showing Kung-Fu and classic Chinese-language films under the stars. Thanks for...
New Hudson Street gallery to open next door to Films at the Gate.
Films at the Gate salutes the grand opening of a new neighbor: the Hudson Street Gallery. The new art space in Boston’s Chinatown will open on Saturday, September 6, from 12:00-5:00 PM. The gallery is located a few doors down from the Films at the Gate lot, so drop...
Interview with IRON MONKEY director, Yuen Wo-ping
On Sunday night, Sep. 7, Films at the Gate will wrap up five nights of outdoor films with IRON MONKEY (1993) directed by Yuen Wo-ping. Yuen Wo-ping is one of Hong Kong’s most prolific and successful filmmakers. His father, Yuen Siu-tin, was a popular actor in the...
Films at the Gate 2008 Posters and Cards
Help us spread the word! Download and share Films at the Gate posters and cards. Thanks Catherine Lim of the Asian Community Development Corporation and Diane Chen of Asian Voices of Organized Youth for Community Empowerment for creating these materials.      ...


