1996: Jerry Maguire

At the height of his Mission: Impossible fame, Cruise took a risk. He plays Jerry not as a hero, but as a desperate, sweaty, often unlikable man who is learning to be good. Cruise sheds his movie-star gloss here; we see the panic behind the grin, the exhaustion behind the hustle. His performance earned him a Golden Globe and an Academy Award nomination. It remains the most human role of his career.

It is perhaps Tom Cruise’s greatest single moment of acting. It encapsulates the entire thesis of Jerry Maguire 1996 : the agony of trying to be a good man in a business that punishes goodness. Jerry Maguire (1996) endures because the mission statement Jerry wrote at the beginning of the film eventually proves true. Not the business plan—but the philosophy. "The key to this business is personal relationships." Jerry Maguire 1996

In one sweeping, humiliating sequence, Jerry is ousted from his empire. He attempts to poach his clients, but only one athlete stays loyal: Rod Tidwell (Cuba Gooding Jr.), an arrogant, flashy, second-string wide receiver for the Arizona Cardinals. The only other person to join his exodus is the quiet, smitten single mother and SMI accountant, Dorothy Boyd (Renée Zellweger), who believes in his mission statement. She blurts out the legendary line, "I just wanted to say that I am grateful to work with you." At the height of his Mission: Impossible fame,