Disclosure Day opens in US theaters on June 12, 2026, and the Oscar tip-sheets already have Eve Hewson at 10/1 for a nomination off her turn as Jane Blankenship, a former nun and the partner of Josh O'Connor's whistleblower lead. She is not just a breakout actor in a Spielberg prestige film. She is Bono's daughter, and that fact is load-bearing for how the room reads every frame she is in. Her Cancer Sun chart has been tracking exactly this inheritance-of-spotlight dynamic her entire life, and transiting Pluto is making an essentially exact opposition to her natal Leo Mercury the week the film arrives. That's the chart talking.
Here is why this matters beyond the awards chatter: this is the rare chart that shows you, in concrete placements, what it costs to be born into someone else's spotlight before you have earned your own. If you grew up the kid of the famous parent, the brilliant sibling, the founder of the family business, the surname that arrived before you did, Eve Hewson's chart is the mirror. Her Sun sits at 14° Cancer, calculated from her birth data with the Swiss Ephemeris, and it stares directly across the wheel at Neptune at 15° Capricorn, less than a degree apart. Neptune is the planet of dissolved boundaries and inherited atmospheres. A Sun in that close an opposition to Neptune is a self that grows up inside someone else's weather system.
What's Happening
The world premiere ran on June 2, 2026 at Le Grand Rex in Paris, with the US theatrical release set for June 12. The review embargo lifts June 9, and the trade outlets that have already screened it (World of Reel among them) are using the words 'old-school Spielberg.' Josh O'Connor, who plays the whistleblower at the center of the story, told Irish Times: 'It's like old-school Spielberg. I think people will be excited.' Colman Domingo, who co-stars, has been more direct in press: 'By the end of it, I was weeping.' He added that it is 'one of the most hopeful films anyone will see right now.'
Hewson plays Jane Blankenship, described in the trade press as a former nun and Daniel Kellner's girlfriend, a role with the religious-residue texture that the Spielberg-Koepp screenplays have always favored. Ladbrokes spokesperson Nicola McGeady framed the bookmaker's 10/1 line in plain terms: 'Eve Hewson is mixing it with the best these days. A Spielberg movie being added to her back catalogue, and it appears she could be in Oscar contention when the season rolls around.'
