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小さな扉 / A Little Door _01
$LITTLE
$LITTLE

小さな扉 / A Little Door _01

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小さな扉 / A Little Door _01 足元に、扉を掘った。 空はもうどこにもない。 #GrokImagine #SunoAI

The pitch — full draft

小さな扉 / A Little Door _01 足元に、扉を掘った。 空はもうどこにもない。 #GrokImagine #SunoAI

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Screenplay draft

Title: 小さな扉 / A Little Door
Credit: Written by
Author: 
Draft date: 
Contact: 

FADE IN.

EXT. BACKYARD HATCH - NIGHT

Sodium light from the street spills across packed dirt. A single bulb hums overhead, casting an orange wash that stops at the edge of a cracked clay pot holding a wilted bonsai.

AKIO, 34, kneels in a faded navy jumpsuit stained with clay. His short black hair is matted with sweat. Dirt cakes the edges of his fingernails. He holds a metal tape measure taut between both hands and stretches it across the soil in a precise square.

He marks each corner with the tip of a rusted trowel, pressing down until the metal bites. Soil peels away in thin, even layers. He listens to the quiet between each scrape.

Akio drives the trowel along the lines he has drawn. The blade sinks, lifts, sinks again. Wet earth curls back on itself. He stops, wipes the back of his wrist across his forehead, leaving a faint smear of clay.

He sets the tape measure aside and works the trowel under one edge of the square. The wood lifts with a soft scrape. A wooden hatch, no larger than a laptop lid, rises flush with the ground. Blackness shows beneath it.

Akio switches on his headlamp. The beam cuts downward two meters and dies against solid clay. He leans closer, studying the darkness inside the square. His shoulders remain hunched, his breathing even.

He sits back on his heels. The sodium light flickers once across the open hatch and the turned soil around it. No other sound reaches the yard.

CUT TO:

EXT. BACKYARD HATCH - NIGHT

Sodium light from the streetlamp pools across the turned soil. AKIO, 34, kneels in his faded navy jumpsuit, dirt caked under his fingernails. A cracked bonsai pot sits two feet from the square hatch, its leaves yellowing under the orange glow. He holds the measuring tape taut across the wooden lid, then lets it retract with a soft click.

He stops. The suburb is silent except for the distant hum of a power line. Akio tilts his head, listening. No footsteps. No voices. Only the faint drip of rain from a neighbor's gutter.

He sets the tape aside and grips the rusted trowel. The metal edge scrapes along the hatch's perimeter in slow, even strokes. Soil peels back in thin, wet curls. He works one side, then the opposite, pausing after each pass to check the fit with his palm.

Akio wedges the trowel point under the forward edge. He levers upward. The wooden hatch rises with a low scrape, edges blurred by fresh rain. Blackness opens beneath it, a square of absolute dark no larger than a laptop. Cool air rises against his face, smelling of wet clay and iron.

He leans forward, headlamp still off, and stares into the opening. The sodium light stops at the rim. Nothing below reflects it back.

INT. AKIO'S APARTMENT - NIGHT

Sodium light leaks through a single curtained window and falls across a low table cluttered with soil samples in clear plastic bags. Clay dust coats the edges of each bag. A metal tape measure lies uncoiled beside them, its blade marked with faint rust.

AKIO enters from the hallway. His navy jumpsuit is streaked with fresh dirt. He carries two new sample bags in his left hand, fingernails black at the quick. He sets the bags down next to the others without removing his shoes. The floorboards creak once under his weight and then hold still.

A bonsai sits on the windowsill under a clip-on grow light. One branch has already turned brown at the tip. Akio reaches out and adjusts the light so it points directly at the wilted leaves. The bulb hums at a steady low pitch.

He straightens. For a moment he remains standing, eyes on the table. The only sound is the faint drip of water from a pipe somewhere behind the wall.

Akio lowers himself onto the single cushion on the floor. His knees crack softly. He places both palms on his thighs and stares at the uncoiled tape measure. The grow light flickers once, then steadies. Outside, a car passes; its headlights sweep the curtain but do not reach the table.

He does not move. His breath comes in even, shallow intervals. The apartment holds the silence.

EXT. BACKYARD HATCH - NIGHT

Dusk settles over the suburban yard. Sodium light from the streetlamp pools across the square meter of turned soil. The wooden hatch lies flush, its edges already blurred by rain.

Akio enters frame carrying a measuring tape and rusted trowel. He kneels, plants both knees in the wet clay, and extends the tape across the hatch from corner to corner. The metal clicks once. He notes the reading in a small notebook, then retracts the tape and measures again along the perpendicular edge.

He leans closer. With the trowel he scrapes a thin ridge of soil that has crept over the wood. The blade moves in short, even strokes. Each scrape leaves the edge clean. He pauses, listens to the empty street, then repeats the measurement.

The tape extends a third time. Akio adjusts the hatch a millimeter left, then a millimeter back. His dirt-caked fingers press the corners down until the surface sits level with the surrounding earth. A single drop of rain lands on the wood and spreads.

He sits back on his heels. The headlamp clipped to his jumpsuit remains off. Only the streetlight reaches him, turning the wet clay orange-brown. He measures once more, the tape whispering out to its full length before snapping shut.

Akio stands, brushes clay from his knees, and walks a slow circle around the hatch. His footprints loop back over themselves in the soft dirt. He stops at the original position and lowers himself again, trowel ready for one final pass along the seam.

EXT. BACKYARD HATCH - NIGHT

Sodium light from the streetlamp pools across the turned soil. A square wooden hatch, no larger than a laptop, lies flush in the dirt, edges darkened by rain. The bonsai in its cracked pot leans toward the light, leaves curled.

AKIO kneels beside the open square. His navy jumpsuit is streaked with clay. Dirt packs the creases of his knuckles. He holds the rusted trowel in his right hand, blade resting on the rim.

He reaches up and clicks the headlamp on. The bone-white beam drops straight down the shaft and stops two meters below against packed clay. No reflection. No depth.

Akio leans forward. His breath fogs once, then vanishes. He sets the trowel on the soil beside the hatch and grips the wooden edge with both hands. The wood is damp, cool.

He swings his legs over the side. The soles of his boots scrape the inner wall. Clay flakes away in dry curls and fall without sound. The beam stays fixed on the same flat plane of earth beneath him.

Akio lowers himself another few centimeters. His shoulders clear the hatch. The sodium light above thins to a narrow orange ring around the opening. The headlamp beam remains unchanged, pressed against the same patch of clay.

He pauses, fingers still on the rim. The air below carries the smell of wet iron. No wind. No distant traffic. Only the faint scrape of his own clothing against the hatch frame as he shifts his weight.

Akio releases the edge. His body drops the final distance. The hatch frame rises above his head. The headlamp beam holds steady on the solid wall of clay two meters down.

INT. PRIMARY SHAFT - NIGHT

Akio hangs suspended in the narrow vertical tunnel. Compacted clay walls press close on every side. His headlamp beam cuts a thin white cone downward, then wavers as his hand shakes. Above him the square opening remains a faint gray patch no larger than a postcard. Soil grains drift down from the edges and settle on his shoulders.

He stops descending. Legs braced against the tool-marked clay, one hand gripping the frayed rope. The other hand holds the headlamp steady. Breath fogs in the beam. Wet iron taste coats his tongue. No sound reaches him from the surface except the distant, steady drip of rainwater through the hatch seams.

Akio tilts his face upward. The gray square wavers. He shifts his weight, testing the rope. Clay flakes away under his boots and falls past his k

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