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English or Spanish? Compare “Culpa Mía” and it is newly published English remake “My Fauly: London”.

Last year, the film industry saw a variety of adjustments to book-to-film adjustments, with new spins on beloved stories in streaming and at the box office. In 2017, the Argentine author Mercedes Ron released her first of three stories by Wattpad-to-Print, “Culpa Mía”. The book follows a young girl named Noah, who moves into the new billionaire and son of her mother. As the outsider of this world of wealth and luxury, Noah is fighting to adapt to her new lifestyle and new step brother, which is also upset about her new circumstances. In the course of history, wild events such as drag racing, fist struggles, romance and car hunting appear, which Noah and Nick bring through the steps of their friendship and their developing attraction. In view of his unique selling point, this highly maker love trilogy was one of the most popular writing pieces in his genre and was picked up by Amazon Prime for a three-film deal.

“Culpa Mía”, the first film adaptation, was published in 2023 and immediately received a cult supporter. The film follows the same premise as its source, but focuses on setting up the next two films and not on craft and quality. The sequel “Culpa Tuya” was published in December 2024. During his press tour it became known that there would be an English remake of “Culpa Mía” that would come out of this February. “My Fauly: London” was released on February 13th in the storm and the same story of the central characters of “Culpa Mía”, Nick and Noah, but retired in English. “My Fauly: London” destroyed the reviews of “Culpa Mía” as evaluations, whereby many argued that “my guilt: London” was far superior and better written. This gap raises the question: Are the ratings of both films a result of the culture and language in which they concentrate, or is one really better than the other?

Each film leans on the cultural aspects of their attitudes and London with slang and events such as parties, dinner and excursions to the worldview and the conspiracy. “Culpa Mía” leans into the lively and sunny atmosphere of the Spanish coast and emphasizes promenades and dirt racetracks as settings for its decisive scenes. “My Fauly: London” optes for shiny skyscrapers and cosmopolitan life with weakly illuminated low -point parties, parking garage -drag race and artistic British houses that play the same role. These changes not only reflect the realities of their surroundings, but also the personalities of the characters and their work.

Almost all characters of “Culpa Mía” change their personality and background to absorb their new cultural peculiarities. In “Culpa Mía” Noah is brazen and childish, while Noah is a lot of mature and playful Snarky in “My Fault: London”. Both girls follow the same route, but navigate differently in their relationship with Nick. Nick, billionaire “Daddy's Boy”, as it is lovingly looked at by Noah, is very different between the two films. Both nicks have the same properties to be fairly rude and resistant to take part in boxing in the combat club style and illegal drag racing. The version of Nick “My Fault: London” is a true British dandy who takes care of Noah and focuses on protecting them and helping them to objectify them. The “Culpa Mía” version of Nick, on the other hand, is a red flag that deals against the objectification and toxicity towards Noah. Instead of starting as friends The version of Nick and Noah “My Fauly: London” first find their conflicts in their friendship. As a result, the fan preference swings in the direction of the version of Nick “My My Fauly: London”, since his authentic personality compared to the “Culpa Mía” version of Nick, which is, compared to the “Culpa Mía” unpredictable and has a closed nature.

In view of the differences and similarities between the two films, it is clear which film is rather popular by your audience. While most fan fiction and their adjustments are dependent on tropics and dramatic twists “My Fauly: London” approaches things differently. It offers a real connection that shows how a situation like Nick and Noah would realistically play and leave tropics aside. With “My Fauly: London”, which was published two years laterIt is no surprise that writing and storytelling are much stronger because there were earlier criticism from which one could take into account and work away. The interesting original of remakes is that creative freedoms can be taken, which in this case has made for a much better film.