The Denver Post

“The Holly” highlights the tragic case of a Denver activist

- By Nicolas Rapold

At the point where Julian Rubinstein’s investigat­ive documentar­y “The Holly” begins, an entire biopic’s worth of drama has already happened. After years in gangs and prison, Terrance Roberts became an activist and founded a successful youth program to rejuvenate a troubled Denver neighborho­od known as the Holly. Then, in 2013, while organizing a peace rally in the area, he shot a gang member he knew, and was arrested and charged with attempted murder.

The film portrays Roberts’ turmoil as the 2015 trial approached, and sorts through a paranoia-inducing churn of local police crackdowns, gang activity and general controvers­y. Roberts prepares a self- defense plea, but vents about further blowback after he speaks out against the back channels between law enforcemen­t and gangs.

Dangling speculatio­ns in voice- over, Rubinstein at times suggests a lower-key, adenoidal Nick Broomfield as he taps his surprising­ly outspoken sources: amiable former gang members, flamboyant Rev. Lee Kelly (who takes over as a neighborho­od liaison after Roberts) and Roberts’ supportive father, also a reverend.

Terrance Roberts emerges as a Shakespear­ean figure of forceful magnetism who fights mightily against being viewed as a walking metaphor for the Holly’s struggles. His fearlessne­ss is both heroic and tragic, though Rubinstein’s sometimes foggy explanatio­ns of community politics make the film feel as if it might vanish into the night at any moment. (The director, a journalist, partly shot the movie while writing a more detailed book with the same title.)

It’s all a heady brew that leaves one wanting to know even more about Roberts, who is now running for mayor in Denver. The movie resists encapsulat­ing him, or perhaps he escapes its director’s full understand­ing.

 ?? REUTERS — KEVIN MOHATT, PROVIDED BY JULIAN RUBINSTEIN ?? Denver activist and former gang member Terrance Roberts uses a bullhorn in “The Holly,” a Denver-based documentar­y from author-director Julian Rubinstein that won a surprise upgrade to the red carpet at this year’s 45th Denver Film Festival.
REUTERS — KEVIN MOHATT, PROVIDED BY JULIAN RUBINSTEIN Denver activist and former gang member Terrance Roberts uses a bullhorn in “The Holly,” a Denver-based documentar­y from author-director Julian Rubinstein that won a surprise upgrade to the red carpet at this year’s 45th Denver Film Festival.

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