

Actress Sophie Winkleman portrays an older Susan at the end of the first film. In Disney's live-action films, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (2005) and Prince Caspian (2008), Susan is portrayed by actress Anna Popplewell. She was the only Pevensie that survived the train crash (because she was not on the train or at the station) on Earth which sent the others to Narnia after The Last Battle. During her reign at the Narnian capital of Cair Paravel, she is known as Queen Susan the Gentle or Queen Susan of the Horn. She is also mentioned in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader and The Last Battle.

She appears in three of the seven books-as a child in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and Prince Caspian, and as an adult in The Horse and His Boy. Susan is the elder sister and the second eldest Pevensie child. Susan Pevensie is a fictional character in C. Peter, Edmund and Lucy Pevensie (siblings)

The new one was a deeper country: every rock and flower and blade of grass looked as if it meant more.Anna Popplewell as Susan Pevensie in the 2005 film, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. The difference between the old Narnia and the new Narnia was like that. And the sea in the mirror, or the valley in the mirror, were in one sense just the same as the real ones: yet at the same time they were somehow different - deeper, more wonderful, more like places in a story: in a story you have never heard but very much want to know. And as you turned away from the window you suddenly caught sight of that sea or that valley, all over again, in the looking glass. And in the wall of that room opposite to the window there may have been a looking-glass. You may have been in a room in which there was a window that looked out on a lovely bay of the sea or a green valley that wound away among mountains. Perhaps you will get some idea of it if you think like this. “It is as hard to explain how this sunlit land was different from the old Narnia as it would be to tell you how the fruits of that country taste.
