Our Fault review – ultra-glossy Spanish step-sibling melodrama is too bland to be annoying

Third film adapted from the romance novels by Mercedes Ron, originally written in Spanish, feels clunky and cliched This is the third film in a series, after My Fault in 2023 and Your Fault in 2024 , that have been adapted from the Culpable trilogy, romance novels by Mercedes Ron, originally written in Spanish. It’s obviously aimed at a specific market that expects a certain blend of melodrama, softcore sex and lush lifestyle porn, and (more importantly) is invested already in the trilogy’s story. Given those parameters, it probably delivers – although the dialogue, at least judging by the subtitles, is super clunky and cliched. Complete outsiders coming to this cold may be a little baffled by what’s going on, since this concluding instalment makes no effort to fill in any blanks. But even total newbies will get the gist that heroine Noah (Nicole Wallace) still has feelings for her ex Nick (Gabriel Guevara) – who also, somewhat disturbingly, was once her stepbrother, although their ...

Subhash Ghai lauds Saiyaara’s success; says, “Big stars don't guarantee big success”

Veteran filmmaker Subhash Ghai has expressed his admiration for the success of Saiyaara, emphasizing the importance of storytelling over star-driven casts. Known for directing iconic films like Pardes and Taal, Ghai shared his thoughts on the changing dynamics of cinema and praised Saiyaara for proving that compelling narratives continue to resonate with audiences.

In a social media post shared on Sunday, Ghai commended the film for showcasing how heartfelt storytelling, the fresh pairing of Ahaan Panday and Aneet Padda, and balanced production values can outperform exaggerated marketing and inflated star salaries. He wrote, “When a new star cast film creates a wave at box office. It sends us a clear msg to investors n producers not to make an over budget film more than a good story needs - not to invest on main actors more than your production cost - no money spend on stars whims - no extra spend on marketing stunts. Audience is surely ready to accept a good heart warming film with right casting all over India ????????.”

 

View this post on Instagram

  A post shared by SG (@subhashghai1)

The Taal director highlighted that audiences are fully prepared to welcome well-crafted, emotionally engaging films featuring the right cast—be it newcomers or seasoned actors. He added, “My heartiest congratulations to Adi Chopra n Mohit Suri for proving the fundamental principles of film making a Hindi commercial cinema and made a film Saiyaara a history today.

He attributed Saiyaara's success to its compelling direction, well-structured script, soulful music, and thoughtfully chosen cast, describing it as a film that has “made history today.”

He concluded, “Good producer good director good story script, good music n right casting big or new stars n balance budget n well shot film matters only. Nothing else. Wish u all great success. Cinema zindabad.”

Within just three days of its release, Mohit Suri’s Saiyaara has taken the box office by storm, becoming one of the top-grossing Hindi films of 2025. Marking the Bollywood debut of Ahaan Panday and Aneet Padda, the film has already surpassed the ₹100 crore milestone globally, fuelled by full theatres and widespread word-of-mouth acclaim. With its momentum still going strong, Saiyaara now ranks as the 8th highest-grossing Hindi film of the year—and its box office run is far from over.

Also Read : Subhash Ghai leases commercial property in Mumbai for Rs 3.38 lakhs monthly, totalling Rs 2.24 crores over five years: Report



from Latest Bollywood News | Hindi Movie News | Hindi Cinema News | Indian Movies | Films - Bollywood Hungama https://ift.tt/vgY6bR0
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

BREAKING: Interstellar back in cinemas due to public demand; Dune: Part Two to also re-release on March 14 in IMAX

EXCLUSIVE: Mona Singh gears up for an intense role in an upcoming web series; Deets inside!

The enigma of Rose Dugdale: what drove a former debutante to become Britain and Ireland’s most wanted terrorist?