A SNAPSHOT of the best new Spanish language cinema is to be presented in Edinburgh next month with an outreach programme for Stirling, Tranent, Glasgow and Inverness.

A packed programme of cinema screenings, guest appearances and cultural events featuring a total of 15 films from Spain and Latin America will be on offer during the 11th Edinburgh Spanish Film Festival (ESFF).

The festival’s popular wine-tasting event will also return with a selection of tapas from local Spanish restaurants.

Festival director Marian Aréchaga said Spanish cinema was “on a high”, with the number of films produced in Spain rising steadily in the past few years.

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“At ESFF we are delighted to bring the best of those titles alongside some of the most exciting features from Latin America,” she said.

All films will screen in their ­original language with English ­subtitles. For hard of hearing ­audiences, ESFF continues to work with ­local accessibility experts, Screen ­Language, to offer screenings with descriptive captions.

Fiction and reality are also part of this year’s programme. The Teacher Who Promised The Sea by Patricia Font is a historical drama that follows one woman’s search for her great-grandfather’s remains and unearths long-buried memories of the Spanish Civil War.

I Am Nevenka, about the first ­Spaniard who spoke up during the #MeToo movement, is the latest film directed by multi-award-winning writer, actor and director Icíar ­Bollaín.

Birth by Pau Teixidor is ­dedicated to women whose children were ­stolen at birth in the 1980s and the ­documentary I Am A Rebel by Paloma Concejero takes viewers on a journey through Spain in the 1970s and 1980s featuring British singer Jeanette.

In a new partnership celebrating the depth and diversity of cinema, ESFF and French Film Festival UK have joined forces to present ­Celia Rico Clavellino’s Los Pequeños Amores which will tour to ­Macrobert Arts Centre, Stirling, The Fraser Centre, Tranent, Institut Français d’Écosse, Edinburgh; Glasgow Film Theatre and Eden Court, Inverness.

In addition, Spanish novelist ­María Dueñas, whose works have been translated into more than 30 ­languages and adapted for television, will be in conversation with Alexis Grohmann about literature, writing and the art of narrative.

And in a new collaboration with Scottish charity, The Welcoming, which supports asylum seekers, ­refugees and migrants in ­Edinburgh, ESFF will present a special ­workshop with ESFF producer, Dr Natalia Stengel.

This year, ESFF will also ­collaborate with online education platform ­Platino Educa to offer The Olive Tree by Icíar Bollaín, which is free online for all UK secondary schools.

The festival runs from October 2 to 26 in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Tranent, Inverness and Stirling