Director: Dani Girdwood, Charlotte Fassler
Cast: Asha Banks, Matthew Broome, Eve Macklin, Ray Fearon, Enva Lewis
My Fault: London is a 2025 romantic drama film directed by Dani Girdwood and Charlotte Fassler, starring Asha Banks and Matthew Broome. A London-set sequel expanding the global My Fault franchise, the film follows a young American woman navigating a charged new family dynamic in one of Europe's most iconic cities.
What is My Fault: London about?
When eighteen-year-old Noah relocates from the United States to London alongside her mother and her mother's affluent new husband, she enters a world far removed from everything familiar. The grand household comes with an unexpected complication: a stepbrother whose presence she cannot easily ignore. Though both resist the pull between them, the connection refuses to fade quietly. Meanwhile, a shadow from Noah's past begins to close in — her biological father, newly freed from prison, has started searching for her, adding a layer of tension that neither she nor her new family is prepared for. The film keeps its focus on the internal conflict of loyalty, longing, and belonging as Noah tries to build a life that is genuinely hers.
Cast & crew
Asha Banks leads as Noah, bringing an appealing mix of vulnerability and resolve to the role. Matthew Broome plays her stepbrother, and their charged dynamic carries much of the film's emotional weight. Supporting turns from Ray Fearon, Jason Flemyng, Eve Macklin, Enva Lewis, Kerim Hassan, and Sam Buchanan round out a capable British ensemble that gives the London setting genuine texture.
Context & significance
My Fault: London will resonate with Persian-speaking viewers who have followed the original Spanish-language My Fault series on streaming platforms worldwide. The franchise has built a devoted following across the diaspora for its blend of forbidden romance, family conflict, and glossy production values. This London chapter relocates the story to a culturally diverse European capital that many Iranian diaspora viewers know well, and the themes of displacement, new beginnings, and family friction speak directly to the immigrant experience. The film is available on K-Time with Persian dubbing as well as Persian subtitles, making it fully accessible to viewers of every preference — whether you prefer to hear Farsi or simply read along.
Where & how to watch
My Fault: London is available now on K-Time with both Persian dubbing and Persian subtitles. Watch on your browser, TV, or phone with no VPN needed and no geo-blocking. A single subscription covers all your devices, and you can cancel anytime.