Utilizing jump cuts, dissociative editing, and a generally blasé attitude toward the celebrities Hendrix meets—huh, there's Eric Clapton, whatever—Ridley wants to demystify stardom to focus on the flesh-and-blood realities of people stumbling toward a career in the arts. The Hendrix on display in Jimi is an incredibly gifted guitarist and certainly wants to have hit singles, but he's not sure if all the fuss is worth it.

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In the film, we spend zero time watching songs get created, instead observing as Hendrix encounters several different beautiful women who serve as muses: Linda Keith (Imogen Poots), Keith Richards' girlfriend who takes a shine to Hendrix in New York when he's still just a guitarist-for-hire; Kathy Etchingham (Hayley Atwell), a London scenester who begins a serious relationship with him; and Ida (Ruth Negga), a fictionalized character who tries to get Hendrix in touch with his African roots. There are parallels with Benjamin here, too: He's always been willing to talk openly about his love life in song, from "Ms. Jackson" on down.

Most music biopics can't wait to get their main characters to the point when they're discovered, setting the stage for the predictable, triumphant look-how-successful-they-are montage (immediately followed by the inevitable drugs-have-really-taken-their-toll montage). Jimi doesn't bother with any of that and, more radically, suggests that Hendrix was a perfectly interesting, happy guy before he became famous. Benjamin plays Hendrix as a regular person: uncertain about love, feuding with a distant father, awestruck by the new Dylan album. When someone in Jimi refers to Hendrix as a genius, you're almost caught off guard. Now we think of him that way, but the movie doesn't oversell that point. In Jimi, he's just some occasionally temperamental, kinda sweet kid who's really good with a guitar.

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Often, when actors play musicians, the trick is getting them to seem convincing when it comes to actually playing music. But Jimi is that rare biopic where the offstage and out-of-the-studio moments are far more important. Benjamin's never had a character this complex to play, and he carries it off with style. Working the guitar and inhabiting the world of a top-flight musician is no problem for him, but it's his stillness that's really arresting. Benjamin conveys Hendrix's genius not through wild flourishes, but with quiet confidence. No wonder so many men and women are drawn to the guy: His understated presence is galvanic, making you wonder what he's thinking behind the sleepy eyes, loopy smile, and crazy hair.

That confidence is an act in real life, too. "That it's easy for me, I guess, is the biggest misconception," he told GQ in 2012. "People think you kind of ride on this wave, this non-human wave, and I think that's kind of wrong to put that on entertainers ... It's hard work just like anything else."

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In that same interview, he noted, "It's funny, I don't even consider myself a rapper, I don't consider myself a designer, or even an actor ... I just like creating stuff and trying to make good work, whatever it is. I don't care if it's designing toothbrushes. It's just making cool stuff to leave behind, that's all it is, it's nothing more." With his funky outfits and out-there videos, Dré has always seemed a bit like a benign alien, this cosmic weirdo who's a little off but incredibly talented. His reticence about the spotlight has only intensified our fascination, and perhaps that's what accounts for his ambivalence.

With that in mind, Jimi provides him with the best of both worlds. He's not playing himself, but through the withdrawn, mysterious, undecided Hendrix, he gets to express some of the misgivings he has about the entertainment-industry machinery without revealing too much. And he does it with impeccable artistry. As Jimi ends, the guitarist walks off into the distance, prepared to become the legend we all know. It's a bittersweet moment, because it also signals the end of the pre-notoriety Hendrix, the life before the crushing demands of fame. Benjamin has said that he doesn't like nostalgia. But one wonders if he doesn't deeply identify with this younger Hendrix, envying the seemingly endless possibilities that life presents when the songs are still fresh.

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Grierson & Leitch is a regular column about the movies. Follow us on Twitter, @griersonleitch.

The Concourse is Deadspin's home for culture/food/whatever coverage. Follow us on Twitter:@DSconcourse.