The Department of Film Direction sent its DB3 batch into the hills of Padivayal, Wayanad, for The Mist & Manuscript — a three-day writers’ residential retreat held from May 1 to 3, designed exclusively for the school’s senior direction students. Set deep in the Western Ghats, far from the noise of the city, the retreat gave students an uninterrupted stretch of time to focus on one thing: their scripts.
For a senior direction batch nearing the end of its training, this stage of the course is less about learning new techniques and more about finishing what they’ve started — refining a vision, tightening a screenplay, and getting a script ready to actually shoot. A residential writing retreat like this strips away the everyday distractions of campus life and gives students the kind of sustained, focused time that screenwriting genuinely demands. Mist-covered hills, tea plantations, and a quiet hillside homestay in Wayanad made for a deliberate change of scene — the sort of environment built for deep work, not just inspiration.
Writers’ retreats have long been part of how serious screenwriting gets done, in film schools and professional writers’ rooms alike, precisely because a script rarely comes together in short bursts between classes. Over three days, DB3 students worked through their scripts with the kind of immersion that a residential film direction program in Kerala can offer but a regular classroom can’t — time away to think, write, rewrite, and sit with a story until it actually works.
The Mist & Manuscript reflects a broader part of Don Bosco Film School’s approach to training filmmakers: pairing technical, set-ready skills with the space to develop as a storyteller. For students in the Department of Film Direction, a strong script is the foundation everything else gets built on — and retreats like this one make sure that foundation gets the dedicated time it deserves before students take their scripts to the floor.