Your Fault: London review โ British-set remake of Spanish step-sibling romance lacks passion or fizz
A second helping of the English-language adaptation of Mercedes Ronโs trilogy sustains little chemistry between its supposedly besotted lead characters H ere is Amazon Primeโs sequel to its hit My Fault: London. If youโre new to the franchise back-story, it started with a bestse
A second helping of the English-language adaptation of Mercedes Ronโs trilogy sustains little chemistry between its supposedly besotted lead characters
H ere is Amazon Primeโs sequel to its hit My Fault: London. If youโre new to the franchise back-story, it started with a bestselling trilogy of romance novels by Spanish author Mercedes Ron (who self-published the first one). Itโs a tale of the forbidden love between step-siblings Noah and her smouldering bad boy step-brother Nick. The books have been adapted into a trilogy of Spanish-language films , the second of which is remade here with absolutely no sense of fun or humour. A couple of its good-looking actors give performances with frozen, startled expressions, like theyโve been kidnapped from the set of an advert for luxury five-star holidays.
It picks up from the previous movie, with Noah (Asha Banks) and Nick (Matthew Broome) now in a full-blown relationship. Nick insists on keeping it a secret from their parents, who were recently married; heโs worried what his overbearing billionaire dad (Ray Fearon) will say if he finds out. Noah reluctantly agrees, and leaves home to study at Oxford, where she meets nice, sensible second-year student Michael (Joel Nankervis). โWeโre just friends,โ Noah says. Nick has turned his back on illegal drag-racing and is working for his dad, alongside posh blond tech start-up founder Sophia (Louisa Binder). โJust colleagues,โ insists Nick.
Weโre here of course for the sex and money, but Your Fault: London fails to deliver on both fronts. The champagne lifestyle of its fabulously wealthy characters is scraped together on a Lidlโs cava budget. So, when billionaireโs son Nick parties in his hotel room after closing a multi-million-pound deal, it looks like heโs staying at a Best Western. The sex is a let-down too. Nick and Noahโs passion is supposed to be for the ages; they canโt keep their hands off each other. But the sex scenes are softcore-lite, avoiding the relevant body parts, as if written and choreographed by people who donโt know which bit goes where.

