Mother’s Day in Manhattan’s Chinatown and the Lower East Side will be busier than usual this year.
Paramount Pictures is staging a film production with military vehicles and prop weapons in Lower Manhattan throughout the day, according to public notices.
People could be stopped on the sidewalk during stunt sequences. There will be traffic diversions at the busy intersection of Bowery and Canal Street, complicating access to the Manhattan Bridge.
A second shoot will happen at the Brooklyn-bound outer roadway, pushing Brooklyn-bound traffic to the lower roadway for at least three hours. And Paramount will hold parking on more than a dozen blocks.
The shoot is scheduled for Sunday from 4 a.m. to 8 p.m., according to the notices, which were posted in English and Chinese on lampposts across the affected blocks.
Separate towing warnings list the name of the project as “Little Falls.” A listing on castingnetworks.com describes the production as a feature film and seeks “military types” for the Mother’s Day shoot.
The plans have drawn concern from some Chinatown residents, who say they were caught off guard by the timing and wartime imagery on a holiday when families typically gather at neighborhood restaurants.
Paramount Pictures did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did a locations department contact listed on the flier.
Under city rules, notices for filming don’t go up until about 48 hours before filming. That’s meant to help minimize the chance that a shoot will draw larger crowds, according to the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment.
The agency coordinated closely with the production, community stakeholders and city agencies for months to “minimize disruption and ensure the operation is conducted safely and responsibly,” Commissioner Rafael Espinal said in a statement.
“The production has also worked with several local Chinatown businesses and organizations directly as part of the shoot,” Espinal said. “Film and television production supports thousands of New York City jobs and small businesses, and we remain committed to balancing that economic activity with the needs and quality of life of local communities, including being mindful of production concentration in heavily impacted neighborhoods.”
Still, some residents said the plans weren’t well communicated — and they aren’t happy about it.
Susan Lee, a Chinatown community activist and a former candidate for City Council, said she first learned of the shoot Wednesday night through an Instagram post from Explore Chinatown.
She began posting about it on social media and said she heard from neighbors and small business owners who were frustrated by the timing. Lee said three friends told her they were rescheduling Mother’s Day plans because of the shoot.
“One of my friends said it best: ‘What, Chinatown has no mothers?’” Lee said. “Why are they doing this on Mother’s Day?”
She said she’s worried the parking disruptions would hurt local businesses and the military imagery would startle seniors who likely haven’t had more advance warning about the filming.
Lee connected Gothamist with other residents, including a longtime Chinatown physician and a member of a local block association, who shared similar concerns.
Dr. Wah Lee, a physician who has practiced in Chinatown for nearly 20 years and is unrelated to Susan Lee, said he saw the notices outside his building Thursday morning, three days before filming.
He said he and his neighbors are accustomed to film crews using the iconic neighborhood as a backdrop — “Law & Order” shoots regularly nearby, he noted — but the wartime imagery gave him pause.
“I have treated patients that have, you know, gone through World War II, and people from the Vietnam War,” he said. “If they’re not sure what’s going on, they look out the window and they see a bunch of soldiers and a tank rolling down the street, I’m just concerned for their health and wellbeing.”
He also questioned the timing. Families, he said, typically gather at neighborhood restaurants on Mother’s Day, but filming can make getting around difficult.
“They have stop-and-go measures, but I also know that sometimes when they shoot a scene, they can be shooting that scene for quite a while,” the physician said. “The only way to get around there is to really circle an entire block.”
That’s a challenge when you’re walking with “your elderly mother out on a rollator,” he said.
Dorina Yuen, a member of the Elizabeth Broome Block Association, which represents residents near the border of Chinatown and Little Italy, said she also learned about the shoot on Thursday, when it became a topic in her community group chat.
Yuen questioned whether production had given enough notice to a broad enough range of community contacts.
“We’re not just a tourist destination but densely populated residential areas,” she said. “For Paramount to close off these major thoroughfares on a weekend is more than enough of an insult, but to do so on Mother’s Day … is really a point of disrespect.”
The wartime imagery was particularly troubling, she added, on a day when “families are trying to celebrate happy moments.”
Parking will be held on stretches of Bowery, Canal Street, Elizabeth Street, Hester Street, Chrystie Street, Grand Street, Broome Street and Delancey Street, according to the notices.
The first scene is set for Bowery and Canal, with traffic diversions in place. Brooklyn-bound traffic on the Manhattan Bridge’s outer roadway will be diverted to the lower roadway between 3 p.m. fand 6 p.m. for a second scene.
