My Fault: London finale left fans breathless: Did Noah really save Nick, or did love save them both? Full recap ahead of Your Fault premiere

Sinthya Banik | Jun 17, 2026, 02:31 IST
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My Fault: London’s gripping finale on Prime Video blends high-stakes action with emotional depth in this English adaptation of the Spanish Culpa Mía series. Noah confronts trauma as Nick fights for survival, setting up Your Fault.

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Image credit : Prime Video | Noah and Nick’s tangled hearts in My Fault: London is all set to face new love challenges in Your Fault: London
The British adaptation of Mercedes Ron’s bestselling Culpables trilogy, My Fault: London, premiered on Prime Video on February 13, 2025. Directed by Dani Girdwood and Charlotte Fassler, with screenplay by Dani Girdwood and Melissa Osborne, the 119-minute film reimagines the enemies-to-lovers saga for English-speaking audiences.


It follows in the footsteps of the successful Spanish Culpa Mía film series, which first brought Mercedes Ron’s story to screens and built a dedicated global fanbase. The English version stars Asha Banks as Noah and Matthew Broome as Nick, with producers including Domingo González, Álex de la Iglesia, Ben Pugh, Erica Steinberg, and Carolina Bang.

Noah’s reluctant move from Florida to a lavish London mansion after her mother Ella marries wealthy businessman William Leister thrusts her into tension with stepbrother Nick and a web of family secrets and criminal threats.

From Florida trauma to London turmoil: Meet Noah, Nick and their fractured worlds

Noah’s arrival in London is marked by deep-seated resentment and unresolved pain. Having left behind her best friend Haley and boyfriend Dan in Florida, she expects to despise her new life in the opulent Leister mansion.

Her history with her father Travis looms large: once a racer who taught her to drive, he descended into alcoholism and OxyContin addiction, eventually assaulting her physically. Noah’s testimony against him led to his imprisonment, leaving her with guilt, nightmares, and a conflicted mix of hatred and cherished memories of their shared racing moments.


Nick harbours his own emotional scars. His mother, an alcoholic, abandoned the family when he was twelve. Although she later sought reconnection, particularly to spend time with his younger sister Maddie, Nick’s trust had already eroded.

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Despite achieving financial success by creating a popular app at age seventeen, he funnels lingering anger into high-risk activities like underground fighting and illegal street racing. His protective nature shines through with Maddie, revealing a softer side beneath the volatile exterior.

Asha Banks portrays Noah with a compelling blend of vulnerability, defiance and inner strength while Matthew Broome embodies Nick’s brooding intensity and hidden tenderness. Their chemistry elevates the taboo step-sibling dynamic, making it feel authentic and emotionally charged.

The supporting cast effectively fleshes out the affluent Leister household and the dangerous criminal elements threatening it. This English-language take builds on the foundation laid by the Spanish Culpa Mía films, expanding the Culpables universe for new viewers while retaining core emotional beats.

How trauma ignites attraction amid rising dangers

Initial encounters between Noah and Nick are defined by constant arguments and mutual irritation. Yet subtle shifts occur as Nick intervenes when someone spikes Noah’s drink at a party. When she reveals that local gangster Tom tried to take advantage of her, Nick responds with violence, punching Tom and escorting her home safely. Noah also learns of Nick’s entrepreneurial achievements, challenging her assumptions that he simply lived off his father’s wealth.


During one tender moment, Nick notices scars on her body from past abuse and realises they share matching knot tattoos, symbolising inner strength forged through hardship. Their connection deepens as they recognise parallel traumas. Nick’s abandonment issues mirror Noah’s experiences with her father.

Watching his gentle interactions with Maddie softens Noah’s perspective, while she encourages him to abandon violence for his sister’s sake and his own well-being. Despite the societal taboo of their step-sibling relationship, they find solace and healing in one another, viewing themselves as two broken individuals who unexpectedly offer each other a path forward.

External dangers mount quickly. Ronnie, a recently released gangster with a grudge against the wealthy, challenges Nick after a disputed race. Noah, drawing on skills inherited from Travis, takes the wheel and defeats Ronnie. Tensions escalate during a sanctioned fight that Noah pleads with Nick to skip; Ronnie claims Nick’s McLaren as forfeit when he backs out.

Further attacks follow, including a gas station ambush and the brutal beating of Nick’s friend and trainer, Lion. William arranges protection, moving Noah and Ella to a hotel. Detective Sato then reveals Travis’s escape from prison using a fake passport and his alliance with Ronnie to demand ransom from the wealthy Leister family.


The kidnapping, knife fight and heart-stopping chase

Travis and Ronnie kidnap Noah from the hotel. Nick tracks them using the GPS in his McLaren. In a fierce confrontation, Ronnie stabs Nick in the stomach. Undeterred by the severe injury and heavy bleeding, Nick subdues Ronnie with an iron rod and continues the high-speed pursuit.

Travis forces Noah to drive at gunpoint while firing shots at Nick. Noah skilfully manoeuvres through London’s narrow alleys, attempting to protect Nick even as she is held hostage. Nick takes a calculated shortcut, positioning his car to block their path. The collision causes his vehicle to flip, exacerbating his stab wound and leaving him unconscious amid the wreckage.

As police arrive, Noah escapes Travis’s grasp and rushes to Nick’s side. Cornered with no remaining leverage or escape, Travis turns the gun on himself and dies. The immediate aftermath is tense, with Nick’s life hanging in the balance due to substantial blood loss. These sequences highlight how Noah’s racing abilities, once a painful reminder of her father, become instruments of survival and connection-echoing dramatic escalations fans recognised from the Spanish Culpa Mía series.

My Fault ending explained: Scars, survival and the Nick and Noah's strong bond

The epilogue, set six months later, provides catharsis. Nick has fully recovered, though the scars from the stab wound and crash remain visible. He rejoins the family for a relaxed poolside gathering. William and Ella sense tension between Noah and Nick but dismiss any romantic possibility as too improbable to consider seriously.


In a private moment away from the others, Noah and Nick reaffirm their love with a kiss. They choose to keep their relationship secret for the time being to avoid family conflict. Their bond goes beyond a simple rescue- both entered the story carrying deep wounds, Nick from abandonment and self-destructive violence, Noah from abuse and guilt yet their connection grants them agency, understanding, and the will to heal.

The knot tattoos serve as a powerful symbol of this resilient tie. Love does not magically erase their trauma but equips them to face it together, challenging societal taboos around their step-sibling status.

This resolution honours the source material while delivering emotional payoff that resonates with audiences of both the English adaptation and the original Spanish films. Nick’s survival and their continued romance emphasise themes of chosen family, redemption, and resilience in the face of complicated circumstances.

In a way we can say Love saved them both as in the finale we see Noah does not single-handedly "save" Nick in a classic heroic sense. Nick survives the stab wound from Ronnie and the severe injuries from the car crash through medical intervention and his own determination, but it is their mutual love and emotional bond that truly redeems and heals them both.

Looking ahead: What to expect in Your Fault: London

Your Fault: London, the sequel adapting the second book Culpa Tuya, builds directly on this foundation. Noah and Nick will navigate their secret relationship under mounting family scrutiny, while new external pressures and lingering consequences from their pasts further test their growth.


Audiences can expect intensified drama with deeper explorations of their emotional journeys, and the signature mix of intimate character moments and high-stakes action that defined the first film and its Spanish counterparts.

With Asha Banks and Matthew Broome returning in their roles, the English-language adaptations continue expanding Mercedes Ron’s Culpables trilogy for a global audience. The franchise’s momentum suggests further evolution of Noah and Nick’s dynamic as they confront whether their bond can endure beyond moments of crisis.

Stream My Fault: London and Your Fault: London released on June 17, exclusively on Prime Video.
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