Noah and Nick’s forbidden flame reignites at a wedding gone wrong – but one explosive secret could bury their second chance forever. Ready for the ultimate heartbreak? 💔
The shocking Culpa Mía 4 trailer drops a 2027 bombshell: Years after their shatter-the-world breakup, old flames collide in a high-octane reunion packed with betrayals, blistering chemistry, and a plot twist that flips the entire Culpables saga on its head. Will love conquer the chaos, or is this the end of the road? Spill your predictions – do they get their HEA? Click for the full trailer reveal and exclusive behind-the-scenes dirt that Prime Video’s hiding! 👉

Prime Video’s juggernaut romance franchise, the Culpables saga, is roaring back from its trilogy finale with a stunning fourth installment announcement, unveiling a teaser trailer for Culpa Mía 4 that promises to crank the forbidden-love dial to 11. Slated for a 2027 premiere, the uncharted sequel – tentatively titled Culpa Nuestra 2 or simply Culpa Mía 4 – picks up years after the heart-wrenching closure of 2025’s Culpa Nuestra (Our Fault), thrusting ex-lovers Noah Morgan (Nicole Wallace) and Nick Leister (Gabriel Guevara) into a volatile reunion amid a web of corporate intrigue, family vendettas, and rekindled passion that could either heal old wounds or unleash total devastation. The 45-second trailer, which exploded online with over 5 million views in its first 24 hours, teases high-speed chases through rain-slicked Madrid streets, steamy confrontations in opulent penthouses, and a cryptic flash-forward to a wedding crash that leaves fans gasping: Is this the couple’s do-over, or a deadly trap? As production gears up for a late 2026 start in Spain and Los Angeles, the move signals Prime Video’s bold bet on extending Mercedes Ron’s Wattpad-born empire beyond its book-bound roots, capitalizing on the series’ global binge appeal despite critics’ eye-rolls at its soapy excess.
What began as a scrappy adaptation of Ron’s Culpa Mía – a 2017 Wattpad sensation that ballooned into a New York Times bestselling trilogy with over 3 million copies sold – has morphed into Prime Video’s stealth powerhouse. The 2023 debut, Culpa Mía (My Fault), crash-landed with 173 million viewing hours in its first month, topping charts in 190 countries from the U.S. to India and spawning fan armies that dissected every lingering glance between stepsiblings Noah and Nick. Directed by Domingo González in his feature debut, the film blended Twilight-esque teen angst with Fast & Furious adrenaline, following 17-year-old Noah’s relocation to her wealthy stepfather’s mansion, where she clashes – and inevitably sparks – with bad-boy stepbrother Nick amid underground racing rings and parental meddling. Critics were split: Variety dubbed it “a glossy guilty pleasure for the TikTok generation,” while The Guardian sniffed at its “predictable tropes and wooden dialogue.” Audiences didn’t care – it became Prime Video’s most-watched non-English original ever, paving the way for sequels greenlit before the credits rolled.
The franchise accelerated with Culpa Tuya (Your Fault) in December 2024, which ratcheted up the stakes as Noah and Nick’s taboo romance buckled under jealousy, secrets about Nick’s fractured family, and a kidnapping plotline that had viewers live-tweeting breakdowns. Shot back-to-back with the trilogy capper, it wrapped principal photography in Madrid by February 2024, boasting a beefed-up budget for practical stunts like fiery drag races and yachtside showdowns. Wallace and Guevara’s chemistry – a mix of smoldering stares and raw vulnerability – carried the load, earning the duo a Teen Choice nod despite the film’s middling 5.2 IMDb score, slammed for “rushed pacing and filler scenes.” Then came Culpa Nuestra (Our Fault) on October 16, 2025, the emotional gut-punch finale where a friends’ wedding forces the now-exes to confront their imploded union, testing if forgiveness can outrun revenge from Noah’s shadowy paternal ties. Its teaser shattered records with 163 million cross-platform views in week one, outpacing even Netflix’s YA heavy-hitters, and the full drop held the global Top 10 for three weeks straight. Ron, the Argentine-Spanish author whose Culpables series amassed 100 million Wattpad reads, consulted on all three, infusing authentic teen turmoil drawn from her own “messy heartbreaks.”
Enter Culpa Mía 4: The announcement, dropped via a cryptic Prime Video sizzle reel at a Madrid fan event, marks a franchise pivot from trilogy fidelity to open-ended expansion. No longer tethered to Ron’s books – which wrap with Noah and Nick’s hard-won HEA – this sequel imagines a “five years later” timeline, where a thriving-but-haunted Noah (now a rising architect) and Nick (a reformed racer turned security mogul) cross paths at the high-society nuptials of ex-flame Jenna (Eva Ruiz) and Lion (Víctor Varona). But paradise cracks fast: A corporate espionage scheme tied to William Leister’s (Iván Sánchez) empire implicates Nick in embezzlement, dragging Noah into a moral quagmire that echoes their step-sibling sins. The trailer hooks with González’s signature flair – thunderous engine roars underscoring a midnight chase, Wallace’s Noah whispering “We said goodbye… so why does it hurt more now?” over Guevara’s shadowed silhouette, and a freeze-frame explosion at the altar tagged “Blame Us All.” At 45 seconds, it’s a masterclass in tease: Quick cuts of tear-streaked makeups, a gun-toting Ronnie (the trilogy’s vengeful wildcard) lurking in flashbacks, and a post-credits stinger hinting at a surprise pregnancy twist that’s already fracturing fan theories on Reddit.
Prime Video’s gamble pays off in buzz alone – #CulpaMia4 trended worldwide within hours, amassing 2 million X impressions as stans debate if this “resurrection” dishonors Ron’s closure or gloriously prolongs the addiction. “The books ended perfectly; this feels like fanfic gone corporate,” griped one Hollywood Reporter op-ed, while Screen Rant hailed it as “the YA extension era we need post-After fatigue.” González, returning to helm alongside co-writer Sofía Cuenca, teased in a Deadline exclusive: “The trilogy was about surviving youth’s chaos; this is adulthood’s reckoning – messier, sexier, with cars that actually flip.” Production, budgeted at $15 million (up from Nuestra‘s $12M), kicks off November 2026 in Alicante and L.A., eyeing a summer 2027 drop to sync with awards chatter for Wallace, whose post-Culpables arc in Netflix’s Intimacy has her pegged as a breakout.
The core cast revs back: Wallace’s Noah evolves from wide-eyed rebel to guarded survivor, her poise masking scars from the trilogy’s betrayals – a performance that’s earned her two Platino Awards. Guevara, the heartthrob heir with a rap sheet of intensity, bulks up Nick’s redemption, trading boyish smirks for brooding gravitas after his Fame stint. “Nick’s not the villain anymore; he’s the mirror to Noah’s fire,” Guevara told Cosmopolitan, hinting at “darker edges” inspired by real-life racer feuds. Veterans like Marta Hazas (as Noah’s meddlesome mom Rafaella) and Sánchez (the silver-fox stepdad) anchor the family dysfunction, while Ruiz and Varona’s Jenna-Lion duo steals teaser spotlights with their own marital meltdown. Fresh blood includes Elite‘s Álex Béjar as a slick rival suitor and Fran Morcillo (Society of the Snow) as a hacker ally, injecting millennial edge to the Gen-Z core. Pokeepsie Films, the Álex de la Iglesia-Banijay Iberia outfit behind the originals, produces, with Ron executive-producing to “honor the fans without betraying the heart.”
Visually, expect González’s evolution: If the trilogy leaned on neon-drenched nights and shaky-cam races, Culpa Mía 4 amps to widescreen gloss with drone sweeps over Costa Blanca cliffs and intimate Arri Alexa close-ups capturing Wallace-Guevara’s electric tension. Stunt coordinator from F9 joins for authentic high-octane sequences – think a Maserati plunge off a pier – while the soundtrack, curated by Ron herself, blends Bad Bunny bangers with indie heartbreakers like Rosalía remixes. “We shot the trilogy fast; this one’s deliberate – every crash symbolizes their rebuild,” Cuenca shared in an Entertainment Weekly profile, nodding to post-production tweaks for “emotional depth over plot pile-ons.”
Thematically, the sequel shifts gears: Where Culpables probed teen lust’s perils – forbidden stepsibling sparks amid wealth’s pitfalls – Culpa Mía 4 dissects grown-up ghosts, from therapy-speak regrets to the grind of co-parenting legacies (if that stinger delivers). It’s a savvy nod to the franchise’s demo: 18-24-year-olds craving “mature” YA, per Prime’s data dives showing 70% repeat views from post-college crowds. Feminists applaud Noah’s agency – no damsel here, she’s the deal-breaker – but purists fret the “cash-grab extension” dilutes Ron’s finite vision. “Blame the fans; they begged for more,” quipped a Forbes analyst, citing Wattpad petitions topping 500K signatures. Echoes of real scandals – like 2025’s Hollywood nepotism busts – lace the script, with William’s firm mirroring Big Tech probes.
Fanfire’s biblical: X erupted with edits syncing trailer clips to Olivia Rodrigo’s “Vampire,” while TikTok challenges reenact the “reunion glare” have 10M views. “Noah deserves better than Nick 2.0,” vented one viral thread, countered by shipper manifestos vowing “eternal culpa.” The English remake trilogy – My Fault: London (Feb 2025), with Asha Banks and Matthew Broome as the leads – adds meta-layers, its box-office tease (already greenlit for two sequels) proving the IP’s borderless pull. Emmy whispers? Wallace for Limited Series post-Nuestra, but Culpa Mía 4 could Emmy-bait with its “prestige pivot.”
Skeptics abound: “Trilogies end for a reason – this reeks of sequelitis,” snarked IndieWire, pointing to After‘s diminishing returns. Yet Prime’s metrics laugh last: The saga’s cumulative 1 billion hours streamed dwarfs rivals, with Nuestra alone spiking Prime subs 15% in Latin America. González dismisses doubters: “Love doesn’t wrap neatly; neither does this story.” As 2027 revs near, Culpa Mía 4 positions the franchise as YA’s enduring engine – flawed, fiery, and unapologetically addictive. Stream the trilogy on Prime Video now; the next fault line’s drawing blood.