StarIQ Home
Shop at StarIQ for the best in personalized astrology reports. View your horoscope forecasts or change your personal information. Sign up here to receive free horoscope emails on days that are important to you. PlanetPulse describes the daily astrological patterns as they affect all of us, much like the changing weather.
 


 Daily Horoscope

 Weekly Romance
 Horoscope


 Members

 Planet Pulse Audio

 Shop@StarIQ

 Home

 Article Search
 
StarIQ Article Search


 Features
 Aquarium Age
 Market Week
 New Moon Report
 NewsScope
 PlanetIQ

 AstroPort
 Astrologer Directory
 Kepler College
 Organizations
 StarIQ Writers

 Article Library
 Astrology by Hand
 Astrology Community
 Astrology Studies
 Bedroom Astrologer
 Business & Finance
 Celebrities
 Cosmic Cafe
 Current Events
 Health
 NewsScope Archive
 Politics
 Relationships
 Sports
 StarIQ Advisor
 Tarot Archive

 About Us
 Contact Information
 Links
 Link to StarIQ
 Privacy Statement
 Press Room




The "Birth" of a Movie

Everything has a horoscope; the key is figuring out in what moment of time that "thing" was born. Although a movie "brews" for a long time—starting with the story and ending with the last-minute edits and re-shoots to please test audiences—the film is "born" when it is released in theaters. Wedding Crashers was released on July 15, 2005. Despite the lack of some critical information that we would find necessary for the analysis of a natal chart for an individual or a nation—such as the rising sign and exact degree of the Moon—we can survey how the basic themes of a film correspond with the placement of all the planets and the Sun.

Wedding Crashers is about two divorce mediators (Jupiter in Libra), John Beckwith (Owen Wilson) and Jeremy Grey (Vince Vaughn), who crash weddings, pretending to be someone they're not (sentimental and family-oriented men) to have one-night flings with husband-seeking women. They put many notches on their belts, and at the end of wedding season, they set their eyes on the very lavish wedding of a daughter of Secretary of the Treasury William Cleary (Christopher Walken). Through the charming persona created by Beckwith at this wedding, the duo are invited to the Secretary's home, and ultimately the pair fall in love with the Secretary's other two daughters: Claire (Rachel McAdams), an idealist who worked for Habitat for Humanity, and Gloria (Isla Fisher), a sex maniac.

On July 15, Mercury and Venus in Leo were separating from an opposition to Neptune in Aquarius, and were also in a Grand Fire Trine with Mars in Aries and Pluto in Sagittarius. Hence, we have a kite formation, with the opposition from Neptune adding tension to what would otherwise be a smooth flow of fiery, inspiring energy.

Romance and Deception

The Venus-Mars-Pluto combination cannot get more sexual. Venus is the planet of love and sensual pleasure; Mars of sexual directness; Pluto of the attraction to sexual taboos, as well as the role of power in sex (witness Vince Vaughn being tied to the bedposts). This Grand Trine relates to the ease with which Beckwith and Grey pick up and bed numerous women. Neptune, of course, throws a loop into this configuration: Beckwith and Grey make all of this work through the use of deception and false personas (Neptune). Mercury opposite Neptune suggests communicating in a deceptive manner (aka lying). The opposition of Venus to Neptune is what makes their conquests so easy, and what eventually pulls them out of this endless sexual loop. They prey upon women who idealize (Neptune) marriage (Venus) and think they have found the man of their dreams; the duo's "front" (Neptune) is based on an elaborate rule-based system that puts the friendship first (Aquarius), which they enact at flashy and extravagant (Leo) weddings (Venus). However, when they themselves fall in love (Venus-Neptune), their system falls apart and actually backfires. Beckwith really falls in love with Claire, and she feels betrayed when she learns that he is not who he said he was (the disappointment that goes along with the Venus-Neptune package, once the fog dissolves). And Grey, ironically, only falls in love with Gloria when he learns that she lied to him about being a virgin.

Ultimately, the bachelors get married. They realize they are "not so young" and that living in the Grand Trine of Easy Sex is fun, but not all that fulfilling. The real challenge, the escape valve out of the trine, is through the opposition to Neptune.

If this is a story of redemption, Beckwith and Grey transform the expression of Neptune in their lives; for when the foggy illusions they have created disappear, and the "fall" of reality sets in (as when Beckwith contemplates suicide in reaction to Claire's refusal to return his phone calls), they move towards the higher expression of spiritual union with the beloved.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jeffrey Kishner, MA is an astrological counselor, writer, and psychotherapist, as well as host of the Astrology at the Movies blog. He has a graduate degree in integral counseling psychology from the California Institute of Integral Studies, where he first learned astrology. He writes essays on how film directors express the planetary archetypes in their movies. As an astrological counselor, Jeffrey focuses on the aspects (relationships) between the planets in one's natal chart and in one's transits. An understanding of these planetary interactions helps to illuminate one's current struggles and chronic self-defeating patterns. This approach yields powerful insights that aid in self-understanding.

Visit the author's website.

Send an email to the author.

For more information about Jeffrey Kishner, click here.

Other StarIQ articles by Jeffrey Kishner:

  • Peter Jackson's Scorpionic Cinema   1/20/2006
  • The Astrology of Wallace & Gromit   12/2/2005
  • The Contender & Commander in Chief   10/21/2005

    Email this article to a friend.
    Printer-friendly version
    Be the first to submit your feedback on this article



    StarIQ Home | PlanetIQ | AstroPort | Members | About Us | Contact Us
    Link to Us | Privacy Statement
     
    Copyright © 1999-2009 StarIQ.com, Inc.