
In a digital deluge that’s sending shockwaves through the YA romance world, the complete script for the third and final season of Amazon Prime Video’s The Summer I Turned Pretty has allegedly leaked online, exposing the long-awaited resolution to Belly Conklin’s torturous love triangle with brothers Conrad and Jeremiah Fisher. As of November 28, 2025, fans are spiraling into a frenzy of heartbreak, triumph, and outright hysteria, with social media ablaze under hashtags like #BellyConradForever and #TeamJeremiahWeeps. But the real bombshell? Creator Jenny Han, fresh off her directorial debut in Season 3’s pivotal Episode 5, is now helming a feature-film sequel that promises to explode the franchise into cinematic territory.
The leak, which surfaced mysteriously on fan forums and Reddit threads earlier this week, details a gut-wrenching finale that diverges just enough from Jenny Han’s original trilogy to keep book purists gasping. Spoilers abound: After a season of Parisian escapades, emotional reckonings, and Taylor Swift needle drops that have become the show’s sonic signature, Belly (Lola Tung) confronts her fractured heart in a rain-soaked Cousins Beach showdown. The script reveals her ultimate choice—not a tidy wedding bow, but a raw, therapy-fueled epiphany that leaves one brother shattered and the other tentatively redeemed. Conrad (Christopher Briney) emerges as the emotional anchor, his brooding intensity amplified in Han’s directed episode, a visual poem of stolen glances and unspoken regrets that fans are calling “the peach scene on steroids.” Jeremiah (Gavin Casalegno), meanwhile, grapples with growth pains, his golden-boy facade cracking under the weight of unrequited loyalty.
This isn’t mere gossip fodder; it’s a testament to the series’ grip on Gen Z’s collective psyche. Since its 2022 debut, The Summer I Turned Pretty has amassed over 13.8 billion TikTok views, turning beachy nostalgia into a cultural juggernaut. Season 3, which wrapped in September after an 11-episode rollercoaster, drew record streams, with Swift’s “Dress” and “Out of the Woods” syncing perfectly to Belly’s soul-searching montage. Han, the mastermind behind the 2009 novel and its adaptations (including Netflix’s To All the Boys trilogy), has always played the long game. Her directorial turn in Episode 5—infused with Terrence Malick-esque lyricism and even mafia-heist tension for Conrad’s arc—marked a bold evolution, blending intimate character beats with sweeping romance.
Enter the movie: Announced at a star-studded Paris premiere mere hours after the finale, this untitled feature picks up directly from the leak’s cliffhanger, thrusting Belly and her chosen Fisher into young-adult chaos—think career crossroads, family reckonings, and a sun-drenched vow renewal that Han describes as “pure joy.” As writer-director, Han’s vision promises Easter eggs galore, from recycled book motifs to fresh Swift collabs. “There’s one big milestone left in Belly’s journey,” she teased in a recent Hollywood Reporter sit-down, hinting at present-day maturity without spoiling the script she’s already penned.
Yet, amid the euphoria, toxicity lurks. The leak has amplified online vitriol, with actors facing harassment over “Team” loyalties—prompting Han to plead for civility: “Act normal online.” Production insiders whisper of heightened security for the film, set to lens in 2026, as Prime Video eyes a 2027 release to capitalize on holiday binge fever.
For fans who’ve invested three summers in Belly’s glow-up, this leak isn’t betrayal—it’s benediction. It cements The Summer I Turned Pretty as more than a teen drama; it’s a mirror for messy first loves, proving Han’s alchemy turns page-turners into pulse-pounders. As one viral X post lamented, “Jenny Han just broke us to build us back—Conrad stans rise!” In a world craving closure, her bombshell directorial pivot ensures the pretty never truly ends. But at what emotional cost? Only the movie will tell.