Let’s Talk Bookish: Casting in Adaptations

Posted April 10, 2026 by Nicky in General / 7 Comments

Graphic for Let's Talk Bookish, created by Rukky @ Eternity Books, Hosted by Aria @ Book Nook Bits and Dini @ Dinipandareads

Let’s Talk Bookish is a weekly bookish meme created by Rukky @ Eternity Books and co-hosted by Aria @ Book Nook Bits and Dini @ Dinipandareads! Every Friday they have a different topic for participants to write about and discuss, e.g. like this post.

This week’s theme is about casting in (movie?) adaptations of books:

Casting in book-to-film adaptations is always a big topic, and recently, the Wuthering Heights movie starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi has been the source of a lot of controversy. Other 2026 high-profile adaptations include Project Hail Mary, out March 20th, and the new Hunger Games movie, set to release in the fall, both for which the casting has been received more positively. What is most important to you with casting for book-to-film adaptations? Is the perfect hair color, or right height or eyes always a must, or is personality more important? When are book-accurate looks in casting most important? What are your favorite—and least favorite—book-to-film adaptations when it comes to casting?

I must admit I don’t have a lot of skin in the game (again) because I don’t really watch movies very often — nor TV, to be fair. I have surprisingly seen Knives Out and Glass Onion, because I got curious enough about the classic mystery type setups they had going on, but otherwise I’m hard pressed to name anything particularly recent that I’ve seen. I still name Pacific Rim as a recent-ish movie I’ve seen and, uh, well…

It also doesn’t help that I don’t have a visual imagination at all: I’m completely aphantasic, right on the “5” end of the apple test scale, so I don’t really imagine characters in the way described. Instead I get more of a sense of them: you know how birdwatchers get the “jizz” of a bird? Something like that, I think.

I do love the old BBC adaptations of Dorothy L. Sayers’ Lord Peter Wimsey mysteries, so let’s turn to those for an idea of what I think about casting. The main players here are Ian Carmichael (in the black-and-white era) and Edward Petherbridge (in 1987) — I don’t know of any other adaptations, and I don’t know if I want to, because between them Carmichael and Petherbridge set a pretty high bar. Neither of them is quite the right physical type, but they each manage to capture different aspects of Peter’s manner perfectly. I can see Peter right away when I look at Petherbridge, but for Carmichael it takes seeing him in motion and hearing his voice.

The same is pretty much true of the way they speak, to be fair, but reversed: Carmichael needs only speak and immediately he sounds like Peter, while for Petherbridge it’s more the combination… But really, both of them are wonderful Lord Peters, and I delight in their performances.

Ian Carmichael also voices Lord Peter in the BBC radio adaptations, and they’re really good. The BBC often hits it out of the park on radio adaptations, or they did a few decades ago: The Lord of the Rings had a glorious adaptation, and even Andy Serkis (who did a great job as Gollum) can’t quite dislodge my conviction that the radio adaptation’s Gollum is the Gollum. On the other hand, the radio adaptation voice of Aragorn strikes me as wrong every time, though I do get into it as the adaptation rolls along. When it comes to the movie, by contrast, Viggo Mortensen was instantly Aragorn to me: manner, voice, clothes, the way he held himself… Perfect.

(That said, I was disappointed by the movie version of Faramir and never really reconciled with that portrayal, particularly with the changes made to the character for the sake of screen adaptation. Something too “soft” about him, and no, I can’t explain that statement any further.)

There are also times when I’m very sceptical of casting, like casting David Tennant as Crowley and Michael Sheen as Aziraphale in the Good Omens series, but makeup, costuming and pure skill from the actors make it fit like they were perfect all along. I’ve heard the same about the adaptation of Martha Wells’ Murderbot, where Alexander Skarsgård has been able to win over people who were deeply sceptical; I’m definitely curious what I’ll think when I get round to it, if I ever do.

(NB: I’m aware of the allegations against Neil Gaiman. Good Omens was also Terry Pratchett’s — some say the majority of it was Terry Pratchett’s — and I think the TV show was also so much more than Gaiman, though I acknowledge his heavy involvement. I’m not sure if I’ll watch the remainder or rewatch the first two series, and at the moment I don’t expect to. All the same, David Tennant’s Crowley was perfect to me, and I don’t want Gaiman’s misdeeds to take that achievement away from Tennant. Still, I think making this acknowledgement is important.)

All in all, I think I can forgive a lot of infidelity to details like hair colour, eye colour, skin colour, etc, as long as the actors can capture something fundamental about the character. Some can do both, like Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn or Essie Davis as Phryne Fisher, while some can carry the day with voice and mannerisms like Ian Carmichael as Peter Wimsey.

Sorry, though, David Wenham. You just aren’t Faramir. I’m sure you’re perfectly nice, but you’re not Faramir.

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7 responses to “Let’s Talk Bookish: Casting in Adaptations

  1. I’m never watching the MurderBot adaptation partly because my visual imagination is quite vivid and I “know” what Murderbot looks like, and it does not look like Alexander Skarsgård; but the other half of it is my annoyance at casting a popular “on trend” actor for a role that could have gone to a genderqueer person, and could have been cast more interestingly. Skarsgård can act, unlike quite a lot of other people cast because of their timely popularity, but the casting made me lose any interest or faith in the adaptation. Sort of like Kenneth Branagh casting himself in roles he has absolutely not the right looks or manner for at all, to the point that it breaks immersion.

    I don’t think an actor has to fit the character on the page in appearance perfectly, but they do need to convincingly embody them, like you say. Jeremy Brett’s Sherlock remains my definitive Sherlock, for example, and it really has little to do with his appearance. He did strongly resemble the character, but arguably so have most other Sherlocks – it’s his ability to convey Sherlock’s alternating moods, his sympathy towards Watson despite his towering self-confidence, even those hints of camp and the bohemian which could never air on television then or be printed post-Wilde-trial – I can believe Brett’s Sherlock is queer, even if the show never admits to it. I think that’s an advantage both Brett and David Suchet had as well – they were both big fans of the original texts, and studied them quite deeply.
    HarpGriffin recently posted…A book with a key on the coverMy Profile

    • I would strongly have preferred a genderqueer actor to be cast as well. To me it would be nice to see it played by someone who connects deeply with the feelings Murderbot feels, at the very least, since that’s why many of us love Murderbot. Maybe that’s truer of Skarsgård than I know and I’m being unfair, and admittedly it would be unfair to e.g. cast someone touch averse and require them to touch people, there are all kinds of practicalities to consider, but — yeah. I know that’s what acting is for, and yet often I feel portrayals of being (say) touch averse are more parodies than anything, even if not intended to be.

      • I often hear practicalities cited as an excuse for why a marginalised person wasn’t cast. And sometimes, yeah, they might be limiting in a way that can’t be worked around. But most of the time, it’s simply an excuse. And I can say that because part of my job in film was making sets safe for the cast members in a lot of ways that could just as easily be applied for other needs. A touch averse actor would probably just need the same kind of support and safety that a good production puts in place when there are, for example, sex scenes. A wheelchair user would just possibly need the same “plywood highways” we already usually put in place to protect property owners’ lawns, ramps like we place for camera dollies, etc. The excuses used for casting cishet folks in queer roles (or queer coded roles like MurderBot) are usually even flimsier. A friend and I went through a list of genderqueer actors and came up with several we would have loved to see in the role, and some we thought weren’t suited. There were options!
        HarpGriffin recently posted…A book with a key on the coverMy Profile

        • Yeah, I was thinking that a bit as I was writing that comment; a touch averse person might be alright with an intimacy coordinator scripting things, depending maybe on how touch averse they are and whether they can tolerate touch under certain conditions (e.g. I personally can when it’s scripted and fully expected, like I don’t mind shaking someone’s hand on stage for an award, to use a recent example ahaha). It could be doable with the right actor or the right combo of actors.

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