Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
The love between Noah and Nick seems unwavering despite their parents' attempts to separate them. But his job and her entry into college open up their lives to new relationships that will shake the foundations of both their relationship and the Leister family itself.
The love between Noah and Nick seems unwavering despite their parents' attempts to separate them. But his job and her entry into college open up their lives to new relationships that will shake the foundations of both their relationship and the Leister family itself.
The film focuses on apolitical themes of personal relationships and family drama, with no explicit or implicit political agenda or commentary. Its narrative is centered on emotional and relational struggles rather than political or ideological issues.
The movie features a predominantly Spanish cast, providing cultural representation within its specific context. However, it does not actively pursue broader diversity in casting beyond its cultural setting, nor does its narrative explicitly address wider DEI themes such as racial, LGBTQ+, or disability inclusion. The focus remains on the personal challenges of its main characters.
The film 'Your Fault' offers a problematic and harmful portrayal of transsexual characters. It perpetuates stereotypes, misgenders a trans woman, and sidelines trans voices in favor of cisgender interpretations. The narrative suggests trans identity needs 'fixing' and reinforces transmedicalism, resulting in a widely criticized and negative depiction of the trans community.
Your Fault (2024) centers entirely on a heterosexual romance and its associated conflicts. The film does not portray the LGBTQ+ community in any capacity, lacking identifiable LGBTQ+ characters, relationships, or thematic engagement with queer identities or issues in its narrative.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
All principal and supporting characters in "Your Fault" (2024), including Noah and Nick, are portrayed with genders consistent with their established depiction in the source "Culpables" novel series. There is no evidence of any character's on-screen gender differing from their canonical gender.
The film's casting aligns with its Spanish literary source material, with all major characters portrayed by actors of European descent, consistent with the characters' established backgrounds. There is no evidence of a character's race deviating from the source material.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources