A secret romance needs shadows, and this one keeps switching the overhead lights on. That is the first structural problem with Your Fault: London, Prime Video’s sequel to My Fault: London and the second English-language adaptation drawn from Mercedes Ron’s Culpables trilogy. Noah and Nick are now together, which means the forbidden charge of the first film has to give way to something harder to dramatize: the maintenance of desire after the door has already been opened.
Noah, played by Asha Banks, leaves for Oxford. Nick, played by Matthew Broome, enters his father William’s corporate world. Their parents are newly married, so the romance stays hidden. On paper, this is fertile ground for a glossy melodrama about secrecy curdling into suspicion. Noah meets Michael, a sensible Oxford student who appears with all the dramatic subtlety of a loaded gun on a mantelpiece. Nick works alongside Sophia, a poised tech founder whose narrative purpose can be seen from across the room.
The film’s central idea is simple: love gets harder once life starts asking for separate schedules, separate ambitions, and separate lies. That idea has some bite. The execution keeps chewing the same spot.
Jealousy as Architecture
The script treats jealousy like a load-bearing wall. Remove it, and most of the film collapses. Noah insists Michael is a friend. Nick insists Sophia is a colleague. Neither sentence is written to clarify anything. Both are written to make the next argument inevitable.
This repetition matters because the relationship already has enough pressure inside it. Noah and Nick are step-siblings by marriage, their parents remain close enough to expose them, and Nick fears William’s reaction. Those elements give the film a moral hallway to walk down. Instead, it keeps opening side doors marked misunderstanding, suspicion, reunion, repeat.
Oxford should change Noah’s shape. The setting offers libraries, new friends, a campus social rhythm, and a chance to let her exist without Nick’s shadow crossing every frame. Briar and Michael give her a social world outside the mansion, and there are moments when the film seems ready to watch Noah become a young woman with desires that do not all point back to one man. Then Nick enters the emotional field again, and the story tightens around the same old knot.
Nick’s corporate storyline has the same problem in a sharper suit. His move away from illegal racing into William’s business should mark a shift from adrenaline to responsibility. Yet his private behavior still belongs to the old Nick: possessive, reactive, proud, and allergic to honest speech. The film dresses him for adulthood, then writes him like a boy guarding a toy car.
Chemistry Under Bad Lighting
Banks and Broome keep the film from sinking into pure diagram. Their chemistry has a physical grammar: the held stare, the half-step too close, the pause before one of them says the thing that will make everything worse. Banks gives Noah a brittle self-possession that plays best in the Oxford scenes, where she seems to be testing a version of herself that Nick has not approved. Broome’s Nick works best in quieter moments, when the brooding rich-boy mask slips and panic shows underneath.
The romance, though, is caught between heat and caution. The film sells Noah and Nick as a passion that cannot be contained, then stages their intimacy with careful restraint. The bedroom scenes lean on proximity, soft lighting, and breathy intensity, yet the choreography often feels too clean for a relationship that is supposed to be dangerous. It is less erotic combustion than a luxury candle, expensive, controlled, and unlikely to set off the alarm.
That matters because this franchise runs on taboo. The step-sibling premise is softened by the fact that Noah and Nick meet as young adults and share no blood relation, yet the family structure is always there, pressing on the glass. Your Fault: London wants the scandal to feel intoxicating. It rarely lets the characters sit with the ethical discomfort long enough for intoxication to turn into consequence.
Ray Fearon’s William remains an imposing pressure point, since Nick’s fear of him motivates the secrecy. Eve Macklin’s Ella carries the domestic risk of the situation, the mother whose happiness has accidentally built the room where Noah’s secret lives. The film could have used those parents as moral lighting, casting different shadows across Noah and Nick depending on who might find out. Instead, they function mainly as locked doors.
Gloss, Money, and the Thinness of Fantasy
Charlotte Fassler and Dani Girdwood give the sequel a cleaner, larger surface than its predecessor. Oxford helps. The old stone, formal rooms, and campus interiors create a sharper visual contrast with Nick’s sleek business spaces. The camera understands the appeal of polished privilege: the clothes, the cars, the glassy offices, the controlled interiors where everyone looks expensive before anyone says anything interesting.
Yet the fantasy keeps betraying its budget. Nick’s hotel-room celebration after a major business deal should feel decadent, a young billionaire’s son mistaking wealth for gravity. Instead, the setting looks strangely modest. For a film selling money, sex, and forbidden risk, that visual shortfall hurts. Melodrama needs scale. If the emotions are going to be absurd, the rooms should at least have the courtesy to look sinful.
The reduced racing element is a smart and costly choice. Smart, because the sequel avoids tipping into action-thriller clutter. Costly, because the first film’s pulp energy came from fast cars and bad judgment happening in the same bloodstream. Here, corporate parties and jealous glances replace engines and danger. The film is more controlled, which is not always a virtue.
The soundtrack has a similar issue of surface over precision. Several song choices feel pasted onto the scene rather than drawn from it. A fight lands, a track arrives, and the emotion gets underlined instead of deepened. Music in a romance should behave like subtext. Here, it often behaves like a social media caption.
A Faithful Adaptation With a Narrow Keyhole
Your Fault: London stays close to the familiar shape of Culpa Tuya and the Spanish-language adaptation. For fans who want the English version to hit the same beats, this fidelity has value. Noah goes to Oxford, Nick enters the family business, Michael and Sophia stir jealousy, and the relationship lurches toward the final chapter. The machine runs.
The trouble is that fidelity can become a locked room. Viewers already familiar with this story will find few new angles beyond the London and Oxford framing, the cast, and the language shift. The film does not reinterpret the material so much as restage it under different lamps. Marcus Thorne rule of thumb: if a remake changes the furniture but keeps the same bad floorplan, someone still trips in the hallway.
For the intended audience, the film will work in pockets. Banks and Broome supply enough longing to keep the central couple alive, and the glossy YA melodrama delivers the required menu of secrets, jealousy, attractive pain, and romantic volatility. Those pleasures are real. They are also limited.
The strongest version of this sequel would have trusted distance as drama. Noah in Oxford, Nick in business, two young people learning that desire does not automatically mature into trust. That film appears in fragments, in a glance from Banks, in a flicker of insecurity from Broome, in the occasional shot where a room seems to understand the secret better than the people inside it. Then someone refuses to communicate, again, and the lights come back on.
The British romantic drama Your Fault: London premiered today, June 17, 2026, and is available for global online streaming exclusively on Amazon Prime Video. Serving as the highly anticipated second installment in the English-language UK adaptation of Mercedes Ron’s bestselling Culpables trilogy, the story follows new step-siblings Noah and Nick as their intense secret relationship is tested by physical separation when Noah heads to Oxford University and Nick is consumed by his corporate responsibilities in the city.
Where to Watch Your Fault: London (2026) Online
Full Credits
Title: Your Fault: London
Distributor: Amazon MGM Studios
Release date: June 17, 2026
Rating: TV-MA
Running time: 105 minutes
Director: Dani Girdwood, Charlotte Fassler
Writers: Melissa Osborne, Bella Heesom
Producers and Executive Producers: Ben Pugh, Erica Steinberg, Kari Hatfield, Álex de la Iglesia, Carolina Bang, Domingo González
Cast: Asha Banks, Matthew Broome, Louisa Binder, Joel Nankervis, Scarlett Rayner, Orlando Norman, Eve Macklin, Ray Fearon, Enva Lewis, Kerim Hassan, Sam Buchanan
Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Michael Amico
Editors: Josh Land
Composer: Dillon Baldassero
The Review
Your Fault: London
Your Fault: London has the shape of a forbidden romance and the lighting of a cautious showroom. Banks and Broome give the secrecy a pulse, especially when silence does what the script cannot. Yet the film keeps mistaking jealousy for tension, money for fantasy, and repetition for emotional pressure. A sharper sequel would have let distance corrupt love slowly. This one keeps staging the same argument in nicer rooms.
PROS
- Strong lead chemistry
- Asha Banks’ steady presence
- Sleeker Oxford setting
- Cleaner visual surface
CONS
- Repetitive jealousy drama
- Thin supporting characters
- Weak luxury fantasy
- Cautious romantic staging
- Uneven soundtrack choices






















































