Matthew Broome Confronts Pressure Before Your Fault London Release Date
Matthew Broome says the your fault london release date came with pressure, from the first images to the trailer to the film’s release. Speaking at the Monte-Carlo TV Festival, the actor said he and Asha Banks were trying to prove the English-language version of Prime Video’s Culpables franchise belonged alongside the Spanish originals.
Broome played Nick in My Fault: London, the remake of Culpa Mia, after the Spanish Culpables movies had already become a huge hit on Prime Video. That left the first UK film carrying more than ordinary sequel heat: it had to justify why the studio was expanding a franchise that already had an audience before the English version arrived.
Monte-Carlo pressure on Broome
Broome said the scrutiny arrived in stages. “I remember when we were first announced and it didn’t land the most positively, which was understandable. They’d done such a quick turnaround to do an English version and [the original] was so loved,” he said. He added, “There was definitely the pressure when the first still images of the project came out, or the first clip or the first trailer. Every time [we thought], ‘Once the film comes out in its entirety will we be able to prove to them we’ve done a good job?’”
That is the kind of rollout pressure streaming franchises rarely hide for long. A quick remake of a title already loved in one language can either widen the audience or harden skepticism, and Broome is saying the project felt that squeeze before a single full-length release had a chance to settle the debate.
Prime Video expands Culpables
Prime Video greenlit Your Fault: London and Our Fault: London after the first film’s release, turning the UK run into more than a one-off experiment. Your Fault: London and Our Fault: London are the Anglo versions of Culpa Tuya and Culpa Nuestra, and both were shot back-to-back, a production choice that signals the streamer was willing to move quickly once the first film landed.
The sequel recently premiered in London, and Broome said the story now moves the characters forward by about a year. “The characters have moved in, and in the second film we have been together about a year – and two people in a year-long relationship are drastically different to the way they were when first meeting,” he said. That shift gives the follow-up a different job from the first film: it is not just retelling the setup, but testing whether the relationship can carry a second chapter.
Mercedes Ron and a fourth book
Mercedes Ron’s Culpables novels first found an audience on Wattpad, and she has already written a fourth installment in the series called Culpa Vuestra. Broome said the franchise is not closed off in his mind either: “At the moment we are done, but you never know,” and “Mercedes has written a fourth book and you never know what’s going to happen with that.”
For now, the practical takeaway is simple. The UK version has already moved past the point of proving it can exist; the question is whether the audience that made the Spanish films a hit will keep following the English-language branch as Prime Video pushes the story deeper into sequel territory.