Noah and Nick Break as Secrets Ignite London

In Your Fault: London, miscommunication and jealousy push Noah and Nick to the edge through car racing chaos, a Spice Girls-themed party, heated confrontations, and a cliffhanger packed with betrayal and heartbreak.
By the time Noah and Nick think they’ve finally steadied their relationship, Your Fault: London starts pulling the floor away—one party invite, one workplace celebration, one late-night secret at a time.
Miscommunication does the damage. Noah (Asha Banks). juggling her studies at Oxford and going to parties with friends. finds herself increasingly at odds with Nick (Matthew Broome). who is managing the pressure of work while celebrating with a colleague. What begins as small cracks—doubt. jealousy. and the feeling that the other person isn’t telling the full truth—turns into something far more dangerous as their romance spirals.
Banks and Broome. who recently sat down with MISRYOUM. talked through the escalating mess of the second installment. including the uncomfortable places fans will land when Noah and Nick hit their hardest moments—and the relief of knowing the story doesn’t end there. Our Fault: London has already been shot, and the trilogy is set to return after this one leaves viewers reeling.
A fan response that comes with pressure
The actors say the reaction to the first film—built on viewers wanting them to exist in the franchise—made this second outing both exciting and nerve-wracking. Broome pointed out that fans arrive with preferences. but it still matters to him that viewers feel they’re “on our side. ” especially after the first film introduced Noah and Nick as relative newcomers.
Banks described the comeback as daunting precisely because people responded well the first time. She and Broome wanted to deliver the second book and movie “as much justice as the first. ” and they’re bracing for the emotional backlash that can come when a romance fractures on screen. “I also feel like this is the movie where some fans are going to get a little upset,” Banks said. Her plea was simple: “Stay on our side, please!. Stay with us!”.
Car chaos, Posh Spice, and bickering at speed
One of the film’s biggest set pieces—shot in a cramped. high-speed race-car moment—lands in the middle of all that relationship noise. In the scene where Noah gets in the car before the race starts and Nick races for Lion. Banks and Broome had to keep up the performance while bickering and trying to win. Banks called it “so hard. ” explaining that it was different from the first film. which had them driving alone in the car and offered a more stable car scene in London.
This time. the race adds speed. and the pressure comes from being together. bickering. and trapped in the same confined space. Broome added that the crew shook the car and sprayed water on it. Banks said the production required them to hold each other and keep saying, “We’ve got this. We can do this.” She insisted that the silliness is meant to disappear on screen: the VFX and the crew work make it look seamless even as the actors are fighting. pretending to race. and reacting in tight quarters.
Then there’s Noah’s outfit—and her confidence—when she dresses up as one of the Spice Girls. Banks said the first fitting for the second film immediately put her on “Posh Spice” duty. with a wig and a bob fitted over the difficult task of fitting her hair into a wig cap. She called the whole experience “so much fun. ” saying she even stopped herself from asking how a costume that iconic could fit into a uni party.
Michael’s conversation, and a fight that turns into passion
As Noah and Nick slide into mistrust, Michael (Joel Nankervis) plays a role that viewers are already debating. In a moment where Michael talks to Noah about keeping their relationship a secret and addresses Nick’s insecurities. Banks doesn’t see manipulation in the exchange. She said Michael is being honest. adding that he’s clearly falling for Noah and can see Nick “isn’t being the man” he could be for her in that specific moment.
For Banks, that’s what makes it a live-wire conversation: “It is a debate for both of them, and for Sophia.” She tied it to what the movie keeps circling—questions about intent that never fully settle.
That tension detonates later in a heated fight at Nick’s place. After Nick arrives at Oxford and finds Michael in Noah’s room, the confrontation escalates quickly. When Nick tells Noah that she’s his. the scene shifts from fighting to undressing—fast enough that Banks and Broome both described it as a release.
Broome compared it to a musical moment: when words stop working. the story turns into physical action—“They’re either going to fight or… the other.” Banks emphasized the care behind the shift. saying the script and performance were built to make the transition feel like it belonged. and that it only really makes sense when the argument reaches intense passion. Broome summed up the motive without dressing it up: “At the end of the day, they just want each other. That’s all.”.
They also pointed to how much of the scene’s energy came from its pacing. Broome said it was their first heightened. intense argument at this stage—one where Noah and Nick already know how to push each other’s buttons and what will set the other off. Banks said they worked on incorporating that history so the conversation could spiral into screaming and then into physical closeness.
Addison Rae’s “Fame is a Gun” plays over the scene, and both actors said they listened to it while filming.
Reveal after reveal on a staircase
The ending of Your Fault: London is where the film’s escalating emotional noise becomes impossible to ignore. The final stretch piles revelations into a short span of time. with Nick and Sophia kissing where Noah can see them. Briar (Scarlett Rayner) dropping the bomb that she used to be with Nick. and Nick learning that Noah and Michael aren’t actually together.
Broome called the day tough. saying he struggled with the way multiple beats needed to land at once on a grand staircase—each moment requiring its own spotlight while everything still had to flow. Banks agreed, describing it as challenging because the audience must pick up every piece to follow what’s happening.
She described the filmmaking mechanics of those scenes too: the gut instinct for how a character reacts still has to make room for technical details—timing. placement. and coverage—because each person’s moment matters for the final puzzle in the edit. The chaos, she said, is real on the day; in the cut, it comes together.
Banks also described the moment when Nick realizes Noah was with Michael as emotionally hard. She said it was exhausting to film. and that they likely did coverage for Broome’s reaction first—so when the cameras turned to her. she was already carrying the weight of heartbreaking discovery. Broome framed the beat as “the final, ‘Oh, no.’”.
When violence becomes the breaking point
The film doesn’t stay in silence as things collapse. Broome addressed Nick’s violence in a moment that he described as the “last straw” after repeated restraint. He said that as Nick—while earlier versions of Nick might have punched Michael immediately—this Nick has tried to do the “good thing” multiple times. It’s the final escalation, and he believes Michael triggers it by saying what he knows will get to Nick.
Broome didn’t try to justify the violence as right, but he explained it as a breaking point: pent-up anger and frustration finally outpace control. He compared it to Nick turning into something like “Hulk” in the moment.
And then there’s the cliffhanger that keeps the story alive
Because the ending is designed to hit hard. the film’s promise is clear: Noah and Nick continue in Our Fault: London. a third installment already shot. Banks said it feels good to tell crushed fans that the story isn’t over. Broome put it in a different key—viewers get to watch the characters again “in a whole different phase of our lives. ” with them older. more mature. and handling their problems differently.
Banks said there’s “a light at the end of the tunnel.” Broome immediately complicated that line with a question of his own: “Or is there?”
Your Fault: London is available to stream on Prime Video. The third film, Our Fault: London, continues the romance at a new stage—one where the same people will have to live with what this installment proved beyond doubt.
Your Fault: London Noah Nick Asha Banks Matthew Broome Prime Video Our Fault: London Spice Girls Oxford miscommunication cliffhanger
So it’s like breakup drama on a cliffhanger? Love that for them I guess.
I’m confused like… London is the show AND the location? Either way jealousy is doing the most. Oxford parties?? That seems fake but also why not.
Wait Noah is at Oxford and Nick is at work celebrating with a colleague and it’s all because of a “secret” invite? Sounds like high school logic tbh. I hope they don’t make it a “Spice Girls themed party” thing like that’s the real betrayal.
Miscommunication and jealousy pushing them to the edge?? That sounds like literally every teen romance ever. But the worst part is they think they steadied the relationship and then it pulls away with another invite, like okay so who’s even in charge of invites in London 😭. Also the article says Our Fault: London already shot and then “and the…” like did it crash mid-sentence? I just wanna know if they end up together or not, because all this betrayal and heartbreak talk is exhausting.