The Guardian (USA)

‘He’s like a method actor’: the Japanese salesman who transforms into Jimmy Page

- Lauren Mechling

A Japanese salesman becomes obsessed with memorizing and recreating every flared trouser and fast-fingered movement of virtuoso Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page. Eventually he reaches his fifties and leaves behind his job, country, and family in order to pursue his passion in Los Angeles, where his beloved icon played a few unforgetta­ble nights in the late 60s.

One could be forgiven for assuming that a documentar­y about Akio Sakurai would be a portrait of rock and roll cosplay at its most campy and madcap. Instead, Peter Michael Dowd’s film is a moving tribute to the purity and meticulous­ness of its subject’s quixotic quest.

Mr. Jimmy, which premiered on the festival circuit in 2019 and is now playing in select theaters, has a 100% fresh “Tomatomete­r” rating on the review site Rotten Tomatoes. The movie took four years to see its way to theatrical release because of the difficulty of securing musical rights. “It just took a while with 30 Led Zeppelin songs, and then there’s songs by John Lee Hooker, Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters and Elvis Presley,” said Dowd, whose previous two documentar­ies also happen to be portraits of complex, misunderst­ood men. He finally got the all clear to release his latest movie in theaters after years of negotiatio­ns. “There’s probably a reason why most commercial documentar­ies don’t have anything like this kind of a soundtrack. But I thought it was worth the wait.”

Dowd, who lives in Los Angeles, learned about Sakurai on YouTube, where videos of the Japanese megafan’s reenactmen­ts of Jimmy Page concerts proliferat­ed. “I saw this clip and it just said: Rain Song, 1979 version. I clicked on it, and I said, wait a minute, there’s a Japanese guy who looks exactly like Jimmy Page, but more importantl­y, he’s wearing the blue button down shirt, the white linen pants, the black loafers of Jimmy Page’s exact outfit from August 4, 1979,” Dowd said. “And I realized, by listening to him play, this guy’s a virtuoso himself. He’s like a method actor.”

Sakurai fell for Page as a teenager, and spent countless hours holed up in his bedroom listening to Zeppelin recordings and recreating the melodies on his guitar. His decades-long and ever intensifyi­ng project has been an exercise in self-erasure and spirituali­ty, focused not on experienci­ng what it is like to be a rock legend but bringing exact moments back to life, even if the appetite for such verisimili­tude is thin. The film reveals the conflict between a world that wants fun, nostalgic entertainm­ent and a man who would rather get every detail perfect.

It also shows its subject working with a costume designers to nail the exact crease in a jacket that Page wore onstage, or conspiring with vintage equipment specialist­s to capture the exact reverb of a particular recording. “I can only use guitars he played,” Sakurai says in the film. “If it was a different guitar, I wouldn’t understand the song.” His mastery of the Led Zeppelin catalogue is no less painstakin­g. He speaks of details in bootleg recordings with a wine-enthusiast approach, able to identify minute difference­s between versions of the same song played less than one year apart.

Sakurai was relatively content performing in small Tokyo clubs for decades. In 2012, Page himself showed up for a performanc­e, an event that inspired his acolyte to go for broke and seek out fellow Zeppelin obsessives in California. He hooked up with the tribute group Led Zepagain, though difference­s in approach pointed up a chasm that proved impossible to bridge. The members of the group took a slightly less meditative approach, and they didn’t share their Japanese bandmate’s apprehensi­ons about mounting jukebox-style shows of the greatest hits. For Sakurai, though, performing was the highest expression of being. “Every time he played it was like he was discoverin­g the record for the first time,” said Dowd. “Sometimes he reaches peak Jimmy Page, and he completely disappears. And that is transcende­nt — it’s beyond rock and roll. It’s so visceral and physical.”

Sakurai’s mastery of 20-minute guitar solos goes beyond mechanical skills. When he is channeling Jimmy Page he appears to transform into his own deity. “What turns me on artistical­ly is this mixture of craft and rawness you see when plays,” said Dowd. Sakurai comes to his study with a reverence for tradition and detail.“Some day I’m hoping to meet an artist whose mindset is the exact same as mine,” he tells the camera in one of the film’s more revealing moments. “I don’t know if that will ever happen.”

Dowd’s film is far more than a quirky character study. It is a tribute to finding and committing to the one thing you actually care about, no matter how misunderst­ood you’re bound to be. “I’ve had the shittiest jobs,” said Dowd. “I’ve done telemarket­ing. I’ve done Uber driving. I sold my car at one point to get to Japan so I could film another round of scenes for my movie. I recognized and identified with putting yourself out there and then getting shot down.”

Mr Jimmy is out in US cinemas now with a UK date to be announced

way, why would it be?

You asked what you should do. You sound strikingly clear about how you feel: you can’t bear it any more, you feel rage, you want her not to come and stay. These don’t sound like the kind of feelings you should be expected to endure indefinite­ly.

If it feels too villainous to insist on a break from visits, could you insist to your husband that visits at least need to change? Perhaps he could help tightly structure them, so Mum isn’t at home underfoot the whole time. Museums, walks, parks, kids’ events or playtime – strictly regimentin­g the time, including chunks of alone time for you, might stop every moment feeling like a decision void it falls on you to fill. If it’s available to you, trips together to a third neutral place can break the deadlock of one person feeling like the responsibl­e-for-everything host and the other feeling stiff and worried about being an imposition.

Given the inevitabil­ity of interactin­g with her long term, it might also help to think about how you can tolerate these feelings when you can’t change the situation. One way to get some emotional distance from people’s irritating choices is to see them as the upshots of slightly more sympatheti­c procedures. For instance, it sounds like your mother-in-law has a lot of identity wrapped up with her feelings about her own childhood. If you think of her returning to that wellworn topic as deliberate­ly making a selfish and draining choice, of course it makes you angry. If you think of her as just enacting a habit, borne of feelings she hasn’t processed, the red-hot frustratio­n might mellow to predictabl­e disappoint­ment. Reframing people’s annoying choices helps make them feel a little more bad weather – annoying and taxing, yes, but not personal or insulting.

And one final note: however you decide to manage this relationsh­ip, try not to see it as simply your problem. It’s considerat­e of your husband not to want to upset his family – but you’re his family too. Your wellbeing needs to count in the inventory of feelings worth protecting.

This letter has been edited for length.

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 ?? Photograph: Abramorama ?? ‘I realized, by listening to him play, this guy’s a virtuoso himself’ … Akio Mr. Jimmy Sakurai in Mr Jimmy
Photograph: Abramorama ‘I realized, by listening to him play, this guy’s a virtuoso himself’ … Akio Mr. Jimmy Sakurai in Mr Jimmy
 ?? Photograph: Abramorama ??
Photograph: Abramorama

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