Jerry maguire is a top agent of international sports management company. He is a leader in this field and has a deep understanding of this field. Jerry is young, handsome and charming, loyal to his happy client and his beautiful fiancee Avery.
Avery works in the public relations department. She is ambitious in her career, but she is also constantly innovating in her private life and interpersonal relationships. Although Jerry knows how to make friends, as many of his ex-girlfriends have confirmed, he is not good at dealing with intimate relationships. In fact, there is nothing hopeless about Jerry except that he is in trouble. On a rest night, he improvised a mission statement, put forward exciting but unrealistic suggestions for the brilliant future of sports management companies, and made an idealized conclusion that companies should pay attention to quality rather than quantity, and should focus on caring for a few truly valuable customers.
Unfortunately, a week after the announcement, Jerry was rudely fired by the international sports management company. After being deprived of his job, self-esteem and good position, Jerry was in such a bad situation that he was forced to start from scratch and become his own boss. To his surprise, two allied forces joined his company. One is Jerry's former assistant, Rod, who is eager to be like Jerry and resolutely stays with Jerry.
The other is Dorothy, a 26-year-old single mother who always has insatiable desires. She was deeply encouraged by Jerry's declaration, and she firmly believed that Jerry had great potential and would achieve good results in the competition. So Dorothy willingly gave up her accounting position in the sports management company and followed her new boss to an unpredictable future. ...
Brief comments:
There is always one thing in a good commercial movie, which can make the audience have a fan effect when the movie goes somewhere. It can be a gesture, a line, a prop. Mr. Sweetheart has been watched several times, and the most impressive thing is that Tom Cruise pointed his finger at the camera when he saw Cuba Gooding Jr. coming out of the lounge. This gesture, for a friend with tacit understanding, is a sign of what he has experienced. I remember watching this film for the first time in September of 1997, and watching VCD. A year later, a friend came back from New Zealand, and we accidentally used this gesture when we met. It is a proof that this film has penetrated into my heart. Another impressive place is that Tom Cruise was able to find an all-night shop in the early morning to copy 100 of his work speech and make it into a cover, which left me a particularly good impression on 1997' s capitalist life.
Watching this movie again is completely different from the feeling of that year, but you can still see a lot of fun. In addition to the radiant stars in Tom Cruise, the reason why this film is well dressed is naturally related to the director Crowe's love for this type of romantic comedy. Vanilla Sky is his only remake, and every other Crowe film is a romantic comedy. The theme of this film is that the middle class please the American audience and regain themselves. Except for a long story and some reaction scenes of the heroine Rene Zellweger, the whole movie is quite pleasing to the eye and has a good sense of comedy. Cuba Gooding Jr.'s performance is particularly eye-catching, which is a good summer movie.