The Freeman

Amber Heard happy to move on with her life

Actress Amber Heard has a movie coming out that will be new to theaters and mass audiences, but for her it’s actually quite old.

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“London Fields,” an adaptation of a 1989 Martin Amis mystery, has been in some stage of developmen­t for almost 20 years. Heard didn’t get involved until 2013, with music video director Matthew Cullen at the helm, but the roadblocks and behind-the-scenes drama had only just begun.

The film was abruptly pulled from the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in 2015 (after some critics had already seen it) when Cullen sued the producers over a dispute about payment and the final cut, which set off a string of countersui­ts. Producers even sued Heard for $10 million, which she countered with a suit that claimed the production had violated her nudity agreement by using a body double.

It would take until September, five years after cameras started rolling, for the producers to settle, and now the film is finally preparing to debut this weekend in 600 theaters.

“Can you imagine what it would be like for you to talk about an article that you wrote or a piece you did five years ago?” Heard, 32, said, laughing via phone from London.

She can barely relate to the person who did this a half decade ago, when she was in her 20s and newly married to her now ex-husband Johnny Depp, who has a small role in the film.

“All of those factors have changed,” she said. “It’s been so long.”

She can’t quite recall which version she's last seen of the movie which co-stars Billy Bob Thornton, Theo James and Jim Sturgess, although she does still find her character Nicola Six interestin­g.

“You can make different cases for her being empowered or disempower­ed,” Heard said of the clairvoyan­t femme fatale who’s also trapped by an idea that, “death is preferable to the decline of youthful female sexuality.”

Overall, Heard is happy that “London Fields” is finally coming out and says that the issues that have kept it out of theaters “are behind us now,” but that she would have been, “Much happier had the film come out three years ago.”

She said it was “unfortunat­e” and “very wrong” that she was sued and is glad that they were able to settle and that she ultimately didn’t have to pay any money.

“But it’s very important for a female actress or any woman to be able to exercise her own control over her own body and her image,” Heard added. “I’m glad that the version of the movie being released is supposedly respectful with regards specifical­ly to nudity and my nudity agreement. But again, those issues are in the past.”

“In the past” is a phrase that Heard repeats often and the release of “London Fields” helps to close a chapter in her life, and allows her to focus on the future, her humanitari­an work and the December release of her most high-profile film to date, the DC comic book movie “Aquaman” in which she stars opposite Jason Momoa as Mera, a sea queen with Little Mermaid-red hair (she was introduced in a small appearance in “Justice League”).

It took some convincing for her to make that uncharacte­ristic leap. “I’m not that kind of girl,” Heard remembered telling the producers.

“There’s a reason I’ve done probably a lot of bad things in my life with regard to films,” she said. “I’ve struggled and tried to make my way through this business and I haven’t had the luxury to be picky, like most people who start off in the figurative mail room, but there’s one thing I’ve avoided, and it’s being relegated to the archetypal, reactionar­y woman. I’ve never been a rom-com princess.”

She even remembered rolling her eyes when the producers described Mera as a “badass,” but she decided to read a comic book (her first ever) to see what the fuss was about, and found in Mera an unapologet­ic warrior queen who she was actually interested in.

Lately, Heard has been throwing herself into her humanitari­an work and activism. She went to Washington D.C. to show her support for survivors on the day Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavagnaugh was confirmed in October and recently finished up a stretch speaking at the One Young World Summit in The Hague.

“It’s incredibly rewarding to be able to use what experience I’ve lived and endured,

suffered, survived through,” she said. “It’s amazing to be able to use one’s experience­s in life to help others, to help push the conversati­on forward, to change the conversati­on.”

Heard won’t get very specific with her own past as it relates to Depp, even declining to talk about this year’s Comic-Con, where the fact that she and Depp were both in San Diego promoting projects at the same studio presentati­on provoked a fair amount of internet outrage and even a People Magazine article explaining that “the two were not seen crossing paths... there was at least an hour separating their appearance­s.”

Heard accused Depp of domestic violence and in 2016 filed for a restrainin­g order days after filing for divorce after 15 months of marriage. Depp has repeatedly denied the allegation­s, and police officers called to their apartment after a fight between the couple said they found no evidence of a crime. Ultimately, Heard got a $7 million settlement when the divorce was finalized in January 2017, which she pledged to donate to a pair of charities.

When asked if she has felt supported and listened to in the past few years, and in light of the #MeToo movement, Heard again looked to the future.

“I am very happy that I have moved on with my life and keep moving on with my life,” she said. “I just keep wanting to do with my life that which makes it better for other people and myself. And doing the right thing and moving forward and dedicating yourself to justice, truth, to doing what’s right and helping others when you can — that’s everything to me. That’s all I’m interested in.”

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AMBER HEARD

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