The documentary opens with a shot of Sakamoto playing with an toy space gun in the park, reacting to the electronic sounds it makes, as a voiceover of his own voice quotes Debussy. This cuts to a scene of Sakamoto standing in front of an enormous scene in downtown Tokyo, which is playing footage from a YMO concert. Footage of Sakamoto recording in
Onkio Haus studio Panning shots of urban Tokyo and Japanese trains and subways intercut with Sakamoto playing a piano riff in the studio over a multi-layered sample. Sakamoto in eye makeup speaks to the creative opportunities and challenges of living in Japan at a time when it has become an economic superpower. He speaks to people having a hunger for culture, as the film cuts to footage of people dancing to
rock and roll or folk-inspired music in the street. As the
diegetic music of Sakamoto recording in the studio plays in the background, the camera cuts to blue-tinted footage of
danchi apartment buildings, including shots of the tall central cavities equipped with nets to prevent fatal drops. Sakamoto relates his music philosophy to the camera, which then cuts to images of electronics superstores filled with televisions. Sakamoto plays the theme to the 1983
Nagisa Ōshima film
Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence on a grand piano over an excerpt of
the film in which a Sgt. Gengo Hara (
Beat Takeshi), so drunk he claims he's Santa Claus, absolves prisoners Lt. Col. John Lawrence (
Tom Conti) and Maj. Jack "Strafer" Celliers (
David Bowie) of a death sentence. The camera follows Sakamoto hand-transcribing music on
paper and testing it on piano as he speaks to the challenges of composing for film. He then returns to the giant screen, this time playing footage from commercials he appeared in. The camera cuts to short sequences of Japanese street festivals and groups of celebrants carrying an
omikoshi, which segues to concert footage of
YMO playing the song "Tong Poo" on stage. The live footage is interleaved with a scene filmed by Lennard in which Sakamoto and then-wife
Akiko Yano play a duet of "Tong Poo" on their grand piano at home. Sakamoto answers a car phone and, in a mix of Japanese and French, explains that he's filmed "heaven" and that it was full of trees. He then enters the studio and performs his song "Self Portrait," which plays behind the
closing credits. ==Cast==