Board Thread:Fun and Games/@comment-26222852-20150319173634/@comment-26222852-20150908142925

Helloooo, fellow loyal correspondent... <3

Yes, Lutienne is the girl Yarre/Yarrey married...the one who drove him back to Elander on the wooden cart along with the other war-mamed men...The one who helped him when (spoiler alert!) his left hand was amputated.

Why? Have a look at this scene:

Wouldn't these look stunning together on screen? Although you did actually imagine Yarre a bit more boyish, though I believe everyone looks masculine/feminine enough even at seventeen, sometimes particularly at that age. Plus, the war does make him more of a man, and Lutienne...well, she was always a woman (not to mention girls mature quicker than boys, especially at that time, meaning medieval time..).

Wikander is a great actress. The mymicry, the grimasses,the accent, and she can easily even become ugly, weary, worried, but also beautiful, mysterious, hot...That's the true actress! Just like Cate Blanchett when she played an ugly war nurse, a queen, a rich hottie, and even a male rock'n'roll drug addict! lol

Amy Adams I chose only due to the natural chestnut hair. Piper Perabo is my perfect Triss. Both Baccarin and Jenssen would have to wear green eye contacts (hey, if Orlando Bloom had no problem wearing them for LOTR, though he did complain about it, why wouldn't them? ;) ). And Perabo blue contacts.

Were the movie made like 10 years ago, Michelle Pfeiffer would without hesitation be the perfect Margeritha. Good choice as Tissaia though, you are right.

Alexis Bledel as Iola the First, the one Geralt bedded, one that does not speak and is mediumistic, the Ellander priestess, the wardess of mother Neneke.

Sophia Myles as Iola the Second, the healer priestess of Melitele, another wardess of Neneke.

About the SoS, I am starting today, was a bit busy, and also read Orhan Pamuk's "My name is red" the only ever Turkish writer awarded the Nobel prize for literature. But aside from "pulling strings" so to say to get the Nobel prize awarded, the book is great, no need to get worldy honours to appreciate any artwork...And I am not a hipster! Nor corky... ;)