🚨 NICK’S UNFORGIVING HEARTBREAK: Four Years Later, Noah’s Back—But One Betrayal Could End It All Forever. 💔🔥

The Our Fault (Culpa Nuestra) trailer just crashed Prime Video feeds, and it’s ripping open old wounds. Nick’s built an empire from the ashes of their split, but Jenna and Lion’s wedding drags Noah right back into his orbit—eyes locked, sparks flying, secrets exploding.

Noah’s desperate for a second chance, whispering, “I never stopped loving you.” Nick? He’s ice-cold: “Some faults you can’t forgive.” Cue the gut-wrenching flashes: a forbidden kiss in the rain, family threats tearing them apart, and a midnight confession that shatters everything. Is this reunion their redemption… or the final nail?

Fans are flooding timelines with sobs—chemistry still electric, but that unresolved betrayal? It’s poison. Trailer’s at 3M views and climbing. Will love win, or resentment rule? Vote in comments: Team Reunion or Team Walk Away? 👇

In the sun-drenched glamour of Spain’s elite circles, where fast cars, family fortunes, and forbidden desires collide like a high-stakes rally, the Culpables trilogy has become a global obsession. What started as Mercedes Ron’s steamy Wattpad sensation—Culpa Mía (My Fault) in 2023—has evolved into a cinematic powerhouse on Prime Video, blending Twilight-esque intensity with Gossip Girl scheming and a dash of Fast & Furious adrenaline. With over 500 million streaming hours across the first two films, the saga of stepsiblings-turned-lovers Noah Morán (Nicole Wallace) and Nick Leister (Gabriel Guevara) has hooked a generation on its toxic tango of passion and pain. Now, the third and final chapter, Our Fault (Culpa Nuestra), drops its trailer like a grenade, teasing a reunion four years in the making that could either heal old scars or carve new ones.

The two-minute trailer, unveiled on Prime Video’s YouTube channel on September 10, 2025, has already amassed 3.2 million views, spiking #CulpaNuestra to the top trends in Spain, Mexico, and the U.S. It opens with a sweeping aerial of a lavish wedding venue—Jenna (Serena Rossi) and Lion’s (Álex Hernández) nuptials serving as the powder keg for Nick and Noah’s long-overdue collision. “Some loves are worth the risk,” a husky voiceover intones, cutting to Nick, now a hardened 25-year-old heir to his grandfather’s automotive empire, gripping the wheel of a sleek Porsche like it’s his last lifeline. His eyes, shadowed by resentment, meet Noah’s across the aisle—her in a flowing emerald gown, him in a tailored tux that screams untouchable. The chemistry? Undeniable, even through the screen’s haze of heartbreak.

Directed by Domingo González, who helmed the franchise’s visual flair from the start, Our Fault picks up where Your Fault (Culpa Tuya) left off in December 2024: Noah and Nick shattered after her betrayal—a one-night stand with ex Ronnie that gutted their engagement plans. Fast-forward four years: Noah’s carved a path in fashion design, independent but haunted; Nick’s a playboy CEO dodging commitment like traffic cones. The wedding forces proximity, and the trailer wastes no time escalating. At 0:22, a charged dance floor stare-down dissolves into a stolen kiss under pouring rain, Noah’s hands fisting Nick’s shirt as thunder cracks—echoing their Season 1 (film 1) beach rendezvous but laced with desperation. “I never stopped,” she breathes, but Nick pulls back: “You destroyed us.” Fans on X are dissecting it frame by frame, with one viral thread racking up 8,000 likes: “That pull-away? Peak enemies-to-lovers torture.”

The film’s October 16, 2025, premiere—exclusively on Prime Video in over 240 countries—caps a whirlwind production. Filming wrapped in Madrid this July after a February start, dodging real-life drama: Wallace and Guevara, whose off-screen romance fueled early buzz, split acrimoniously in 2024 amid cheating allegations (denied by both camps). Insiders tell Variety the tension bled into reshoots, with intimacy coordinators on set for the trailer’s steamy bits. “It was raw—almost too raw,” González said in a Collider sit-down. “Their history made the forgiveness arc authentic.” Co-writer Sofía Cuenca, adapting Ron’s NYT-bestselling novel, leaned into the books’ emotional gut-punches: jealousy, redemption, and the Leister family’s corporate machinations threatening to derail any HEA (happily ever after).

Breaking it down: The trailer’s mid-section (0:45-1:15) unleashes the chaos. Quick cuts show Noah clashing with Nick’s new flame, Sofia (newcomer Gabriela Andrada), at a high-society gala—glasses clinking, whispers turning to slaps. Enter Simon (Fran Morcillo, Money Heist alum), Nick’s charming business rival who eyes Noah like a merger opportunity, sparking a love triangle that leaks suggest culminates in a betrayal mirroring Noah’s past sin. “He’s the wildcard,” Morcillo teased on Instagram Live post-wrap. Family looms large too: Marta Hazas returns as Rafaella, Noah’s scheming stepmom, plotting with Nick’s grandfather William (Iván Sánchez) to sabotage the pair via a hostile takeover of Noah’s fledgling label. A leaked script page—circulating on Reddit’s r/CulpaMia since August—hints at Episode 4’s (film’s midpoint) bombshell: Nick discovers Noah’s hidden pregnancy scare from their breakup era, forcing a therapy-fueled confrontation in a rain-soaked vineyard. “Forgiveness isn’t forgetting,” the excerpt reads, with Noah sobbing, “Our fault was loving too hard.”

Wallace and Guevara’s return anchors the storm. At 27, Wallace—Elite breakout—has matured Noah from impulsive teen to resilient woman, her arc praised by The Hollywood Reporter for tackling consent and autonomy amid toxicity. “Noah’s not the villain; she’s human,” she told Elle Spain in a cover story. Guevara, 24 and post-Mañana es Hoy, channels Nick’s brooding evolution: from reckless racer to reluctant kingpin, his vulnerability peeking through in a trailer flash-forward to a quiet beach reconciliation. Off-screen frost? It amplifies on-screen fire—X users note their “hate-spark” mirrors the characters’. Supporting cast shines: Hazas chews scenery as the meddlesome matriarch; Sánchez adds gravitas as the patriarchal puppet-master; Víctor Varona and Eva Ruiz reprise as Mario and Jenna, now married but entangled in the fallout. New blood like Andrada’s Sofia injects fresh jealousy, while Goya Toledo’s mysterious aunt teases buried Leister secrets.

Leaked twists, pieced from set photos and anonymous crew drops on TikTok, paint a rollercoaster finale. One blurry still from September shoots shows Guevara cradling Wallace during a car crash sequence—echoing My Fault‘s opener but with higher stakes: Nick racing to save Noah from a sabotaged vehicle tied to family intrigue. Another leak, a 45-second voice memo purportedly from a table read, reveals the ending diverges from the book: No tidy wedding, but a “bittersweet drive into the sunset,” per the audio, with Nick gifting Noah a custom bike symbolizing freedom over possession. “We wanted real closure,” Cuenca explained to Deadline. “Love wins, but not without scars.” Fan theories explode on forums—will Ronnie (Martiño Rivas, absent but rumored cameo) return for revenge? Does Sofia expose a corporate mole? #CulpaNuestraLeaks hit 100,000 posts on X by trailer drop, blending hype with heartbreak: “If they don’t end up together, I’m suing Prime.”

The trilogy’s cultural footprint is massive. My Fault debuted to 20 million views in week one; Your Fault topped non-English charts for a month. Ron’s novels, self-published originals now in 30 languages, owe their empire to the adaptations—Pokeepsie Films, under Banijay Iberia, greenlit an English remake trilogy (My Fault: London) starring Sydney Sweeney lookalikes, with the first slated for 2026. Critically, the series skates controversy: 72% on Rotten Tomatoes for Your Fault, lauded for diverse queer undertones (Noah’s bi awakening) but dinged for glamorizing abuse. “It’s fantasy fuel, not a manual,” González defended in a Vulture profile. Yet, its appeal endures—Gen Z polls on TikTok show 85% “team NickNoah” despite the red flags.

Behind the glamour, challenges abounded. Production halted briefly in April for Guevara’s minor injury (a stunt-gone-wrong flip), and Wallace advocated for more female crew, boosting women to 45% of the team. Ron consulted throughout, ensuring the trailer’s emotional fidelity: that closing shot—Nick and Noah silhouetted against a fiery sunset, hands almost touching—mirrors the book’s poignant ambiguity. “It’s their fault for making us care this much,” one X fan posted, echoing the sentiment.

As October 16 nears, Prime Video ramps promo: virtual watch parties, AR filters for “forbidden kiss” recreations, and a Culpables podcast recapping the ride. For Wallace and Guevara, it’s bittersweet—closing a chapter that launched careers but strained friendships. “We grew up on screen,” Guevara reflected in GQ Spain. “Noah and Nick taught us about letting go.” Will resentment yield to reunion, or fracture forever? Our Fault promises the trilogy’s most explosive lap yet: high-octane drama, heart-wrenching what-ifs, and a finish line where love either accelerates or crashes.

In a streaming landscape craving connection, Culpa Nuestra reminds us: The fault in our stars isn’t fate—it’s the risks we take. Buckle up, lovers. The checkered flag drops soon.