.............. i ==ME w mw ' W-1 ww w w :W .># It4% 4 4 W . t*13 Y #1'1 f1t #,9 1f 1 Bal 2010 (Continued from Page 5, and draped in the sort of hokey metaphysics and stock genre trappings that the old "Star Trek" series ex- cellent in so dreadfully. The narrative begins unraveling almost from the start into innumerable loose ends and throws away scenes before finally derailing with an incongruous, shabbily con- trived subplot about a nuclear confron- tation between superpowers back on Earth. Hyams cut his teeth on potboiler ad- ventures like Capricorn One, and Outland, and he sadly molds this film to essentially the same form. The thinly sketched narrative is padded out with cheap roller coaster thrills like the obligatory spacewalk and a very flashy, but unspectacular, descent into the Jovian atmosphere. Unfortunately, the scenes provoke no real excitement. There's no sense of wonder, no mystery to the film's tone, you can hear it ticking like a well oiled but monotonous piece of machinery. Even Hyams seems to regard films as little more than elaborate erector sets. For someone who claims to be a humanist filmmaker, and Hyams has been waving that banner more con- spicuously with this picture than any of his previous works, there's precious lit- tle human element in 2010. Even usually relaxed actors like Scheider and John Lithgow seem visibly uncom-' never been connected to the Jewish majority in Israel today. The majority 'Mess age of Jews who are in Israel today are not alien from the West, but in fact they are either the refugees themselves, or decendants of the refugees who were expelled from the Arab world in 1948 f r _tD: W hyandhshortlytafterw ards. f D: Why hasn't the world recognized Keir Dullea: not on screen enough fortable, and only vaguely aware of just what it is they're supposed to be doing. Hyams himself seemed to be fran- Mideast Joan Peters, author of the con- troversial book From Time Im- memorial, recently talked with Daily staffer Amy Goldstein. Ms. Peters' observations concerning the- Arab-Jewish conflict were both in- sightful and outspoken. This inter- view complements a review of From Time Immemorial which may be found on page 13. Daily: How did you obtain the infor- mation for your book?] Peters: Well, it was a process of digging, and one thing led me to another. There was a great wealth of information about the subject, but it was very dispersed in its location. One] thing was not connected to another, and it was a matter of being able to find the connections as they exposed them- selves. It was like a Chinese puzzle, you open one box, and found it led to another cover... one led you to another. D: When you were researching it, I understand your focus was first to be on the Arab refugees. Why did your focus change? P: It was because of the situation that really existed in the Middle East, and the Arab-Jewish conflict. You must recognize not just the Arab refugees as we know them, but also so many other refugees, and particularly the Arab-born Jewish refugees who left the Arab countries. No longer could I talk about Arab refugees without talking about the whole group of Middle East refugees. . . which included at least as large a number of Jews who fled the other way and who were ex- pelled from their homeland in the Arab world where they had ancestors living for a thousand or two thousand years. D: Why do you think that something like this hasn't been written about 1 before? P: There have been many mentions in many books about the Jews' ex- 1 pulsion from the Arab countries, but it's this? - P: I think it has to do with the fact that Israel has not exploited its refugees the way the Arab leaders have exploited the Arab refugees who left Israel in 1948. D: Why do you think that is? P: I don't know. I think they have used the argument of Jewish refugees from the Arab world in United Nations discussions. They have said to me that they were reserving this for a discussion and for the negotiations when they finally sit down to resolve the refugee question. They hope that then they will be able to show that for in- stance, all the Jewish property that was expropriated by the various Arab governments more than equals the property that was left behind by those Arabs who left Israel before and during the 1948 war of independence. D: When the Arabs left Israel, why didn't the public know that they could have stayed in Israel? P: Well, that isn't really the point. The point is not only that they were not Peters: quite familiar with the Middle1 population of people from time im- memorial. It simply was not possible. It was a revolving population and that's part of the history that's been un- covered in this book. The tradition of migration, the traditions that were spawned by natural disaster in Palestine, or Southern Syria, or tically pushing his cast through their paces just to get each shot in the can and out of the way, regardless of how raw they are. There's so little character develop- ment going on, other than Scheider's voice-over diary entries. The film's characters, particularly the half-dozen Russian extras, all blur into the op- presively cluttered background of cheap vacuum formed set pieces. Only Keir Dullea's refreshing but breif por- trayal of the impish spectral Bowman shines with any lightness. One suspects that's because Dullea himself is taking it all as just a joke to begin with. This is a drearily sloppy film; one that was rushed into production (little more than a year and a half ago). It really looks and feels only half finished. The film's visual effects are disappoin- tingly shoddy, and would barely make it on a television production. The whole production design is bladly derivative of every single space opera in recent memory, andthe sets themselves so hurriedly slapped together that you can see them coming apart in a number of shots. Hyams oversaw every aspect of 2010 as its producer-director-writer- cameraman, but despite his austerist aspirations he remains a well versed mechanic. He can put a film together and make it run, but he has no sense of aesthetics, and no guiding vision. Watching 2010 roll by is as exciting as watching parts roll by on a factory assembly line. Even if Hyams sincerely thinks he's paying homage to a classic, he's in effect raping it in full public view. The sight is an ugly one. F 'They call it the Arab-Israeli conflict, but, of course, it was a conflict long before Israel became a state in 1948...' -Joan Peters author of 'From Time Immemorial' Eastern situatic D: You mi that's popular talk about the how it has cha: the Jews. Ho the policies ma P: I think ti ingrained ii distributed at Arab-Israeli c was a confl became a stat tradition that questioned. D: How can teracted? P: I wrote because of tho: be seen. D: What ha book been in th P : A very pened. Ther4 Departmenter been Pentago really import groups have 1 sting forth. F themselves to der one auspi taking it ch literally going where the doct the text are b an integral par See M forced to leave, the fact that they were from a people who had a tradition of migrating and moving in and out is not known. The propaganda today is that this was a teaming population of native, indigenous, Palestinian Arabs who had been on their plot of land from time immemorial. The facts are different. There was no way that this land, which the Arabs were said to have fled from, could have supported a teeming whatever it was called. It was, never really considered a geographical or political entity called Palestine. There were dozens of conquests in the area, but all of the buried treasure of the history that is not at the moment being considered within the dialogue, or even within the judgement of what is justice. This must alter the understanding of anyone who is interested in the Middle East, vis a vis the Arab-Jewish conflict. TIS SP~ACE CONTRIBUTEDUBY MTHE-PUBLISHER 2aOOp BEACON ST. CREAMERY ok$\Lr ICE CREAM_ Sunday means FREE Sundaes Monday, Feb. 11th 5 Tuesday, Feb. 12th At Beacon St. TusL FBuy One - Get One FREE WITH THIS COUPON Good Feb. 10 and Feb. 17 orcall764-144anytimeHours 11:30a.m. - 12 Midnight cal CS. University at Church/ 6 Weekend/Friday, February 8, 1985 Featuring: Dinner :l The Asian American Association proudly presents The Lunar New Year Celebration Authei entic Asian Cuisine F1 ive Enteruinment including Charlie Chin Hours of Non-stop Dancing Come Join the Festivities ! Sponsored by Minority Student Services Community Services Office or Student Services Admission : $ 6.00 $ 5.00 presale 7 p.m. February 9, 1985 Stockwell Hall Call 668-4024 763-0896 996 -5952 FL( e4, ot )WERS YoL 2745 PI) A 2135I Ar 76 115 W. Y 48 February 13 &" 1 Weekend/Friday, Fe