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IMDbPro

Jerry Maguire

  • 1996
  • 7
  • 2h 19min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,3/10
301 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
843
515
Tom Cruise in Jerry Maguire (1996)
Official Trailer
Reproducir trailer2:28
4 vídeos
99+ imágenes
Feel-Good RomanceFootballRomantic ComedyWorkplace DramaComedyDramaRomanceSport

Cuando un agente deportivo tiene una epifanía moral y es despedido por expresarla, decide poner a prueba su nueva filosofía como agente independiente con el único atleta que se queda con él ... Leer todoCuando un agente deportivo tiene una epifanía moral y es despedido por expresarla, decide poner a prueba su nueva filosofía como agente independiente con el único atleta que se queda con él y su antigua secretaria.Cuando un agente deportivo tiene una epifanía moral y es despedido por expresarla, decide poner a prueba su nueva filosofía como agente independiente con el único atleta que se queda con él y su antigua secretaria.

  • Dirección
    • Cameron Crowe
  • Guión
    • Cameron Crowe
  • Reparto principal
    • Tom Cruise
    • Cuba Gooding Jr.
    • Renée Zellweger
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,3/10
    301 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    843
    515
    • Dirección
      • Cameron Crowe
    • Guión
      • Cameron Crowe
    • Reparto principal
      • Tom Cruise
      • Cuba Gooding Jr.
      • Renée Zellweger
    • 438Reseñas de usuarios
    • 96Reseñas de críticos
    • 77Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 1 premio Óscar
      • 26 premios y 41 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos4

    Jerry Maguire
    Trailer 2:28
    Jerry Maguire
    Jerry Maguire
    Trailer 2:32
    Jerry Maguire
    Jerry Maguire
    Trailer 2:32
    Jerry Maguire
    Tom Cruise Through the Years
    Clip 1:02
    Tom Cruise Through the Years
    Shakespeare "Goes Hollywood" With Finn Wittrock
    Video 1:36
    Shakespeare "Goes Hollywood" With Finn Wittrock

    Imágenes241

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    Reparto principal99+

    Editar
    Tom Cruise
    Tom Cruise
    • Jerry Maguire
    Cuba Gooding Jr.
    Cuba Gooding Jr.
    • Rod Tidwell
    Renée Zellweger
    Renée Zellweger
    • Dorothy Boyd
    • (as Renee Zellweger)
    Kelly Preston
    Kelly Preston
    • Avery Bishop
    Jerry O'Connell
    Jerry O'Connell
    • Frank Cushman
    Jay Mohr
    Jay Mohr
    • Bob Sugar
    Bonnie Hunt
    Bonnie Hunt
    • Laurel Boyd
    Regina King
    Regina King
    • Marcee Tidwell
    Jonathan Lipnicki
    Jonathan Lipnicki
    • Ray Boyd
    Todd Louiso
    Todd Louiso
    • Chad the Nanny
    Mark Pellington
    Mark Pellington
    • Bill Dooler
    Jeremy Suarez
    Jeremy Suarez
    • Tyson Tidwell
    Jared Jussim
    Jared Jussim
    • Dicky Fox
    Benjamin Kimball Smith
    Benjamin Kimball Smith
    • Keith Cushman
    Ingrid Beer
    Ingrid Beer
    • Anne-Louise
    Jann Wenner
    Jann Wenner
    • Scully
    Nada Despotovich
    • Wendy
    Alexandra Wentworth
    Alexandra Wentworth
    • Bobbi Fallon
    • Dirección
      • Cameron Crowe
    • Guión
      • Cameron Crowe
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios438

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    7LeroyBrown-2

    Good script, good acting equals good film.

    "Jerry Maguire" has to rate as one of the most quotable movies of the last decade and a half. It's given us the lines "Show me the money", "Help me, Help you", "You had me at hello" and "You complete me". And it's that last line, that really describe this movie. It's really about the growth of an individual. We see Jerry Maguire the character, grow from just an agent to becoming much more, it's not an easy trip but for the most part it's an entertaining one.

    Jerry Maguire is a top sport agent. He has a decent amount of big names as client and he's engage to a beautiful woman. Then one day while visiting one of his client in the hospital, the client's young son confronted him after he gives the client a shallow encouragement. The confrontation stick in his mind and would even get him to write a "mission statement" for the company. The "mission statement" basically lays out a plan that the agents give their clients more personal attention. Unfortunately his boss doesn't like it.

    The movie gives us a look at the world of the sports agents. Who are they that gets a cut of an athlete's earning and do they really deserve it? In the beginning they're just there to negotiate the numbers and get the athletes as much exposure. In the end, Jerry has become more than a guy who makes deal for an athlete. It also gives us a look at some clients they're more demanding than the agents are prepared to handle. But if handled right they will prove to be worth the trouble.

    Jerry Maguire is played by Tom Cruise, and he gives one of his best performance. I think it's every bit the equal of Cuba Gooding Jr's. Oscar winning performance. Both men were on top of their game playing off each other. It's sad that his erratic behavior of late has caused harmed to his career because Tom Cruise is a very good actor. So too is Mr. Gooding and Renee Zellwegger, who plays an office worker in Tom Cruise's office and who joined him as he tries to put forth his "mission statement" into practice.

    All in all, I think it's a good movie with a very observant script, complimented by great acting.
    9classicalsteve

    Agent Seeks Something Higher -- Possibly Cruise's Best Film

    At the 1997 Academy Awards, host Billy Crystal referred to the characters played by the five Best Actor nominees (of which Tom Cruise was one) as being "a burned guy, a mentally-challenged guy, a mentally-abused guy, a paralyzed guy, and an agent. And four out of the five are treatable." Of course Crystal was jokingly referring to the Agent as being beyond help. Among the figures of sports and entertainment, agents are often regarded as the necessary evil of the industry often with reputations as being the sleaziest of VIP's, just-above used car salesmen. Their antics which require a high-level of tough negotiations are sometimes seen as money-gouging and materialistic. In the film "Jerry Maguire", Tom Cruise decides to wear the shoes of a sports agent and walk around in them for just over two hours.

    "Who am I, and what am I doing?" Jerry Maguire asks when he realizes his sports agency, SMI, tries to cover up the darker aspects of professional sports. His answer is inspiring, transcendent, and detrimental. He mistakenly writes down his inspired thoughts and submits them to his colleagues for suggesting the agency concentrate better on fewer clients. For his inspiration, he loses his place at his agency and many of his highest-paying clients to his rival Bob Sugar. Subsequently, he also loses his attractive but shallow fiancé. Maguire is forced to try and live his dream of being more caring and receptive towards the needs of his clients rather than just being there to get a slice of his athlete/clients' multi-million-dollar paychecks. In a particularly poignant sequence, he retains his client Frank "Cush" Cushman who is a leading contender in the NFL draft through a handshake with his father, played by Beau Bridges. However, on draft day, he learns through an unexpected phone call that his rival Bob Sugar, through deception, convinced Cushman to sign with him instead. Now, Maguire has retained only Tidwell, and he must create his new agency from the ground up with only a single client as his starting point.

    So the question asked of the movie is: Can a sports agent find a more meaningful, possibly spiritual, life and still acquire the high-paying clientèle? And maybe even more to the point, can an agent make a difference beyond just being a high-powered money negotiator? "Jerry Maguire" is a thoroughly entertaining riches-to-rags-to-transcendence story of a fantasy sports agent trying to find a deeper purpose to an otherwise materialistic existence.

    The film works at almost all levels, particularly because of the dynamism of Tom Cruise and Cuba Gooding Jr. in an Academy Award-winning performance, playing the only client willing to stay with Maguire. Part of the story is Maguire's journey from the purely material to a deeper and more-satisfying existence. Rod Tidwell (Gooding), wide receiver for the Cardinals, is a strange opposite to Cruise but has a similar problem. Tidwell is a devoted father and husband, emotionally involved with his family but does not quite give that same heart on the football field. The story becomes about both characters finding something deeper in their place in the world, Gooding giving what he gives to his family to his team, and Cruise giving to his clients and co-worker/lover Dorothy Boyd his love and attention. Renee Zellweger plays Dorothy Boyd in a passionate and sensitive performance that will definitely bring tears. Zellweger's son becomes an important character and also an inspiration to Cruise to find the deeper and more sensitive part of himself.

    In the materialistic world of late 20th-century America, "Jerry Maguire" is a breath of fresh air. A rare story produced by the money-obsessed film studios about the dangers of losing oneself for the sake of self-promotion and monetary gain. An interesting statistic has emerged of late regarding a high number of American businessmen on their deathbeds who begin regretting the direction and purpose of their lives. "Jerry Maguire" offers an alternative, although probably few in his position would find the wisdom to change course. But since you can't take it with you, life is about what you leave behind.
    9jhclues

    High-Energy Entertainment

    By definition, and depending upon who you're talking to, `Success' can be measured in a number of different ways. It's winning the competition, celebrating a Golden Wedding Anniversary or, to many, just making the most money. The first two are absolutes; you win and you make it to number 50. No gray areas. If you're not dead, you're alive; you're either pregnant or you're not. But in regards to that third item on the list, what are the parameters by which you measure that particular success? Are there lines across which you will not step to make that extra buck? Or do you do whatever it takes-- including selling your soul and sacrificing your very identity-- to make as much of the green as you can. Is that success? Or is that selling out. Can there, in fact, be true success when ethics and integrity are absent? It's the territory writer/director Cameron Crowe explores in `Jerry Maguire,' the hit 1996 film that landed him an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay, a Best Actor nomination for star Tom Cruise, and captured the award for Best Supporting Actor for Cuba Gooding Jr.

    Jerry Maguire (Cruise) is a high-powered sports agent for a huge agency, handling a portfolio filled with high profile sports figures. And the name of Jerry's game is money; he gets the big bucks for those he represents, he keeps them in the limelight and in the end pulls down some mighty big bucks for himself and the firm. But at what price? Who is Jerry Maguire, really? Has he played the chameleon for so long as a means to an end that even he doesn't know who he is anymore? Does he even consider it? If he stopped to think about it, the answer would be a resounding `No.' But then something happens. One night, he wakes up and happens to look at himself in the mirror, and for whatever reason, it suddenly dawns on him what a selfish, soulless, empty life he is leading. So in the wake of this epiphany, he seizes the moment, sits down at his keyboard and hammers out a `mission/morality statement,' in which he reorganizes his entire approach to his career, including reestablishing parameters and setting new priorities making conscience, ethics and integrity his paramount concerns. And while still riding the high of his nocturnal enlightenment, he goes to his office, makes copies of his statement and distributes it to the mailboxes of everyone from his boss on down. Then he goes home and goes to bed.

    In the cold light of morning, however, he realizes what he's done and races to his office to avert disaster. Too late. He enters the room to a hail of praise and appreciation from his peers, but his boss is less enthusiastic. It's no surprise to Jerry, then, when the big `M' his superiors are interested in turns out to be `Money' and not `Morality,' as in `Money talks, Jerry walks.' And just like that he's out the door. But before he leaves, he vows to make it on his own. He's up, he's positive, he has his statement-- and he doesn't have a clue what to do next. What he does know is that the adventure of a lifetime is awaiting. And the world is about to meet the `real' Jerry Maguire.

    Cameron Crowe made his debut as a writer/director with `Say Anything' in 1989, in which he first exhibited that keen insight into the human condition that has been one of the trademarks of his success as a filmmaker. In `Jerry Maguire' he demonstrates again that acute sense of knowing what makes people tick, and leaves no doubt that he knows how to convey it to his audience. Crowe's story, as well as the presentation, is original and imaginative, and he fills it with real characters involved in very real situations. And it's the characters that really sell it, because these are three-dimensional people, not just cardboard cut-outs, and moreover, Cameron knows how to get the best out of his actors to really bring them to life.

    Tom Cruise was the perfect choice to play Jerry; he has the look, the energy and the talent to get inside this guy's skin and make him tick, and he successfully channels his natural exuberance into his character, tempering his performance just enough to make it really work. An Oscar nomination does not come cheaply, and Cruise certainly deserved the one he received for his work here.

    Cuba Gooding Jr.'s performance is deserving of the acclaim he received for it, as well. As Rod Tidwell, the pro football player/client who sticks by Jerry and insists that he `Show me the money!' Gooding equals, if not surpasses Cruise's level of enthusiasm with a vibrant and rich portrayal that makes Rod one of his most memorable characters. Like Cruise, Gooding is perfectly cast and points up, again, what an acute sense Cameron has for who and what will work to bring his story so convincingly to the screen.

    Not to be outdone by her co-stars, Renee Zellweger gives an endearing performance as the vulnerable but steadfast, single mom, Dorothy Boyd. She's such a `giving' actor, and she endows Dorothy with a gentle, caring manner that expresses her deepest thoughts and feelings so well. Her reaction, in the scene in which Jerry tells Dorothy-- with his back turned to her-- that he has broken up with his fiancee, Avery (Kelly Preston), is priceless, and alone makes this film worth watching (repeatedly). Her work here is every bit as Oscar worthy as Cruise and Gooding's, and it's hard to understand why she was overlooked, as she is such a vital presence in this film. 9/10.

    The supporting cast includes Jerry O'Connell (Frank), Jay Mohr (Bob Sugar), Bonnie Hunt (terrific in her role of Laurel Boyd, Dorothy's sister), Regina King (Marcee) and Jonathan Lipnicki, unforgettable as Dorothy's precocious son, Ray. A triumph for Cameron Crowe, this movie is, indeed, magic.
    Leigh L.

    At the risk of my own cynical reputation...

    It's all well and good to stroll through life with a healthy air of scepticism, but despite some peoples' views on these supposedly 'manipulative' romantic films, there are an elite few that really do have things to say based on something more noble than ticket sales - things that are actually worth listening to.

    Jerry Maguire is one of these rare beasts. No, it's not perfect, and no, it doesn't ring true for every last second of its running time, but if you come away from it with a sneer rather than a genuine desire to take a step back and look at yourself, then there's no romance in your soul at all. It's a genre that's always been particularly susceptible to the flood of lacklustre money-spinners, so to come across something that's had so much visible thought and effort thrown into it from all corners is a revelation. I'm not naive enough to think that anything making it big in the film industry these days can be purely a labour of love, but Jerry Maguire at least comes close.

    It's refreshing to see Tom Cruise demonstrate that, against all odds, he can act his heart out when given the right role, as can Cuba Gooding Jr. (neither of them better previously or since) - and the rest of the cast give it every bit as much passion. It's beautifully written, and shot with an easy style that makes me wish there were more directors like Cameron Crowe in this world.

    And on top of that, it gets better with each viewing. Even the soundtrack feels as if weeks have been spent fine-tuning it to perfection, and I'm no fan of Springsteen or Tom Petty. Deride it if you like, I'm not saying that Jerry Maguire's totally free of sentiment... I'm just suggesting that it's not necessarily a bad thing to have your heartstrings tugged and your self-awareness questioned once in a while.
    tfrizzell

    Show Me the Money!!!

    "Jerry Maguire" did something very strange in 1996: it had both critical and commercial success. This was evident in the fact that the four other Best Picture nominees for the year were all independent productions. "Jerry Maguire" shows the business world of America at its worst, in this case in the sports industry. When Jerry Maguire, a sports agent, (played by Oscar-nominated Tom Cruise) has a breakthrough one night he realizes that quality is more important than quantity. Of course he is fired from his job and loses all of his clients except Rod Tidwell (played by Cuba Gooding, Jr. in his Oscar-winning performance). Dorothy Boyd (Renee Zellweger) has left the business with Maguire, agreeing with his views. However, Maguire struggles with his separation from the sports corporation (losing his fiance and the first pick in the NFL Draft). However, he survives and learns that living well and loving well are the keys to happiness. All in all, "Jerry Maguire" is classic Hollywood stuff made in the present-day. Cameron Crowe's script and direction are subtle, but extremely effective. Tom Cruise delivered his best performance to date. Renee Zellweger proved to be the find of the year and Cuba Gooding, Jr.'s quotes and scenes he stole were enough to win him the Oscar in a very competitive year in the Best Supporting Actor category. "Jerry Maguire" is not a perfect film. In fact it is flawed in many ways and is not very accurate in some areas. However, its ability to mix comedy, romance, and drama make it a very entertaining film. The performances are all excellent. 4.5 out of 5 stars.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Jonathan Lipnicki showed up on the set one day telling everyone that "the human head weighs eight pounds". Writer, producer, and director Cameron Crowe liked it so much he wrote it into the script.
    • Pifias
      When Jerry arrives at the Cushman house, he's driving a Dodge Intrepid. When he leaves, he's driving a Pontiac Grand Prix.
    • Citas

      [Rod has just told Jerry he will keep him as his agent]

      Jerry Maguire: That's, that's great. I'm very... happy.

      Rod Tidwell: Are you listenin'?

      Jerry Maguire: Yes!

      Rod Tidwell: That's what I'm gonna do for you: God bless you, Jerry. But this is what you gonna do for me. You listenin', Jerry?

      Jerry Maguire: Yeah, what, what, what can I do for you, Rod? You just tell me what can I do for you?

      Rod Tidwell: It's a very personal, a very important thing. Hell, it's a family motto. Are you ready, Jerry?

      Jerry Maguire: I'm ready.

      Rod Tidwell: I wanna make sure you're ready, brother. Here it is: Show me the money. Oh-ho-ho! SHOW! ME! THE! MONEY! A-ha-ha! Jerry, doesn't it make you feel good just to say that! Say it with me one time, Jerry.

      Jerry Maguire: Show you the money.

      Rod Tidwell: Oh, no, no. You can do better than that, Jerry! I want you to say it with you, with meaning, brother! Hey, I got Bob Sugar on the other line; I better hear you he can say it!

      Jerry Maguire: Yeah, yeah, no, no, no. Show you the money.

      Rod Tidwell: No! Not show you! Show me the money!

      Jerry Maguire: Show me the money!

      Rod Tidwell: Yeah! Louder!

      Jerry Maguire: Show me the money!

      Rod Tidwell: Yes, but, brother, you got to yell that shit!

      Jerry Maguire: Show me the money!

      Rod Tidwell: I need to feel you, Jerry!

      Jerry Maguire: Show me the money!

      Rod Tidwell: Jerry, you got to yell!

      Jerry Maguire: [screaming] Show me the money! Show me the money!

      Rod Tidwell: Do you love this black man!

      Jerry Maguire: I love the black man! Show me the money!

      Rod Tidwell: I love black people.

      Jerry Maguire: I love black people!

      Rod Tidwell: Who's your motherfucker, Jerry?

      Jerry Maguire: You're my motherfucker!

      Rod Tidwell: Whatcha gonna do, Jerry?

      Jerry Maguire: Show me the money!

      Rod Tidwell: Unh! Congratulations, you're still my agent.

    • Versiones alternativas
      In the original theatrical version, during the airport sequence after Jerry and Rod argue, the Paul McCartney song "Momma Miss America" is played. In the television version, Aimee Mann's "Wise Up" is used instead.
    • Conexiones
      Edited from ¿Qué ocurrió entre mi padre y tu madre? (1972)
    • Banda sonora
      The Magic Bus
      Written by Pete Townshend

      Performed by The Who

      Courtesy of MCA Records

      By Arrangement with MCA Special Markets & Products & Polydor Records, Ltd.

      By Arrangement with PolyGram Film & TV Licensing

      Published by Essex Music Inc.

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    • How long is Jerry Maguire?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 14 de marzo de 1997 (España)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Lenguaje de signos americano
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Jerry Maguire - Amor y desafío
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Paco's Tacos - 4141 S. Centinela Avenue, Culver City, California, Estados Unidos
    • Empresas productoras
      • TriStar Pictures
      • Gracie Films
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • 50.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 153.952.592 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 17.084.296 US$
      • 15 dic 1996
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 273.552.592 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      2 horas 19 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • SDDS
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      • DTS-Stereo
      • Dolby Digital
      • Dolby Atmos
      • DTS
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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