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SOPHTIQUE
MAISON
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THE
SUPERSTORE BLUES
INT. TESCO EASTBOURNE
– DAY
A cavernous supermarket bathed in cold fluorescent light. The hum of the bulbs is relentless, oppressive — a mechanical heartbeat.
BEEP. BEEP. BEEP.
SOPHIE SMITH (20), bright‑eyed but worn down, scans items with the precision of someone who’s been doing this far too long. Her polyester uniform hangs awkwardly, refusing to flatter.
She forces a smile as MRS. WILSON, a cheerful older woman, approaches with a trolley full of beans.
SOPHIE
Hello, Mrs Wilson. Stocking up on the beans today?
MRS. WILSON
Oh, you know how it is, Sophie. The boys eat like wolves. Growing like weeds, they are.
Sophie smiles — a real one — but before she can reply, a shadow falls over her till.
The temperature drops.
DEREK DILLINGER, the store manager, appears. His hair is gelled into a helmet, his clipboard clutched like a sceptre of doom.
DEREK
Miss Smith.
Sophie stiffens.
DEREK
This isn’t a social club. Less jawing, more clawing.
Focus on the barcodes, not the biography of the customers.
Mrs. Wilson gives Sophie a sympathetic look. Sophie lowers her gaze.
SOPHIE
Yes, Mr Dillinger. Sorry.
Derek struts away like a man who believes he runs the world — or at least the frozen foods aisle.
Sophie exhales. Her fingers twitch.
In the brief lull before the next customer, she grabs a discarded receipt and a stubby pencil. She sketches — fast, instinctive.
A necklace takes shape. Not just jewellery — art. A waterfall of diamonds, imagined in graphite.
The receipt becomes platinum in her mind.
DEREK (O.S.)
What on earth are those, Miss Smith?
Sophie jumps, nearly knocking over a chewing‑gum display.
Derek snatches the receipt, squinting at the delicate lines.
SOPHIE
Oh… just some sketches. Designs. They’re in my head and I didn’t want to forget—
Derek laughs — a sharp, mocking bark that turns heads.
DEREK
Jewellery? Give me a break.
Look where you are.
Look who you are.
Stop daydreaming and serve the customers. Or else.
He crumples the receipt and drops it into her bin.
DEREK
You’re a checkout girl, Sophie. Act like it.
He walks off.
Sophie stares at the bin. Something inside her cracks — and hardens.
EXT. BUS STOP – EVENING
Rain spits against the pavement. Sophie stands alone, clutching her bag, the “Superstore Blues” heavy on her shoulders.
A rusted hatchback screeches to a stop.
GEORGE BELL (22), her boyfriend, honks without looking up from his phone.
Sophie climbs in. The car smells of stale chips and petrol.
GEORGE
You’re late. I’m starving.
And don’t say you’re tired — all you do is sit on your backside and scan tins all day.
Sophie turns to the window.
The Sussex coastline blurs past, grey and unforgiving.
Rain streaks the glass.
She thinks of the crumpled receipt.
Of Derek’s laugh.
Of George’s voice.
Of her parents’ doubt.
They all think she’s small.
They all think she’s nothing.
Sophie’s reflection stares back at her — tired, but burning.
SOPHIE (V.O.)
One day…
I won’t be looking at the rain through a cracked window.
I’ll be watching it from the backseat of a
Bentley.
Draped in my own diamonds.
The rain intensifies — but Sophie’s eyes shine brighter.
CUT TO BLACK.
>>>>>
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CHAPTER
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SCRIPT
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DESCRIPTION
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PART
I - The Rough Cut (The Beginning) - Focus: Sophie’s struggle, the toxic environment, and the catalyst for change.
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CHAPTER
1
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SCRIPT
1
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The Superstore Blues: Sophie’s daily life at Tesco in Eastbourne. We see her talent for sketching designs on the back of receipts;
Derek Dillinger, and George Smith’s dismissive attitude.
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CHAPTER
2
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SCRIPT
2
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The Glass Ceiling: Sophie shares her dreams of mansions and Bentleys with her parents; they shut her down, telling her "people like us" don't get those things.
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CHAPTER
3
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SCRIPT
3
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The Breaking Point: Sophie misses rent because she spent her spare cash on jewelry tools. Her parents kick her out; George sees she’s "no longer an asset" and dumps her in the rain.
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CHAPTER
4
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SCRIPT
4
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The Dark Night: Homeless and heartbroken, Sophie finds a temporary bed and wallows in grief, believing George and her parents were right.
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CHAPTER
5
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SCRIPT
5
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The Tesco Turnaround: Sophie meets Phoebe Pratt at work. Phoebe sees a sketch Sophie made and is blown away. The "Bestie" bond is formed.
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CHAPTER
6
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SCRIPT
6
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The Uncle’s Workshop: Sophie seeks refuge at her uncle’s shop. He hands her a torch and some silver; she discovers she is a natural-born artisan.
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CHAPTER
7
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SCRIPT
7
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The Double Life: Sophie works overtime at
Tesco by day and crafts masterpieces by night. She realizes her "impossible" dream might just be a plan.
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PART
II - Polishing the Gem (The Middle) - Focus: The rise of the business, the betrayal, and the global expansion.
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CHAPTER
8
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SCRIPT
8
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The Party Piece: Sophie wears her own necklace to a local party. Everyone thinks it’s Cartier. She takes her first three private commissions.
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CHAPTER
9
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SCRIPT
9
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The
Jealous Boss: Dave Dillinger notices Sophie’s glowing confidence and the "side-hustle" money. In a fit of petty jealousy, he fires her in front of the whole store.
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CHAPTER
10
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SCRIPT
10
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The
Digital Pivot: Phoebe takes the lead. She builds a high-end website and uses her "internet guru" skills to make Sophie’s designs go viral on Instagram and
TikTok.
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CHAPTER
11
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SCRIPT
11
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The Scaling Crisis: Orders pour in from across the globe. Sophie and Phoebe realize they can’t do it alone and begin vetting master craftsmen to outsource the work.
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CHAPTER
12
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SCRIPT
12
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The First Flagship: The girls fly to London to open their first small boutique. The contrast between Eastbourne and Mayfair is breathtaking.
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CHAPTER
13
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SCRIPT
13
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The Global Empire: A montage chapter—Paris, Rome, New York. Sophie is no longer a Tesco worker; she is the "Queen of Fashion Jewelry."
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CHAPTER
14
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SCRIPT
14
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The PLC Transition: The company goes public. Sophie is officially a billionaire, but she feels a lingering loneliness amidst the fame.
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PART
III - The Brilliant Sparkle (The End) - Focus: New love, facing the past, and the "Happily Ever After."
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CHAPTER
15
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SCRIPT
15
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The Paris Encounter: While overseeing the Paris branch, Sophie meets Louis Martine, a world-famous actor looking for a custom piece. The chemistry is instant.
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CHAPTER
16
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SCRIPT
16
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The Morning Show: Sophie appears on Good Morning Britain. Back in Eastbourne, her parents and George watch in stunned, greedy silence.
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CHAPTER
17
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SCRIPT
17
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The Audacity of Ghosts: George and her parents reach out, trying to "reconnect" and asking for money. Sophie has to decide how to handle her past.
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CHAPTER
18
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SCRIPT
18
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The Graceful Goodbye: Sophie visits Eastbourne one last time. She doesn't yell; she simply shows them she has outgrown their small world and chooses her new "found family."
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CHAPTER
19
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SCRIPT
19
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The Bentley Moment: Sophie finally buys the mansion and the custom pink Bentley Fastback—her "Lady Penelope" moment.
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CHAPTER
20
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SCRIPT
20
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The Proposal: Louis proposes to Sophie in a setting that rivals the beauty of her own jewelry. She realizes she has found a man who values her, not her bank account.
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CHAPTER
21
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SCRIPT
21
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The Royal Wedding: A lavish ceremony with Phoebe as bridesmaid. Sophie reflects on how far she’s come—from the Tesco aisles to the top of the world.
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