Summer usually brings us up to date with cultural premieres of all kinds:we devour new literary releasesby the sea, leisurely attendnighttime theatrical tours,concerts, and many other activities. It is worth highlighting, as is the summer tradition,the city’ssummer movie theaters, such as the one at the CAAC.
The CAAC and SeFF team up to cool off summer nights
The Andalusian Center for Contemporary Art (CAAC), under the Regional Ministry of Culture and Sports of the Regional Government of Andalusia, presents a new edition of its summer film series
. This edition will be curated in 2026 by the Seville European Film Festival (SeFF).
Six feature films by contemporary, international, and recently produced filmmakers will be screened at the center every Wednesday from June 3 to July 8.
The screenings take place at 10:00 p.m. and stand out not only because they are freeuntil capacity is reached, but also because of the interest they generate among the city’s film enthusiasts, who are eager for independent films of guaranteed quality.
Manuel Cristóbal, director of the SeFF, emphasizes that:
What better venue to host such lively evenings than the Patio del Padre Nuestro, withacuratedprogram of feature-length documentaries.
For his part, Antonio Navarro, the SeFF’s programming director, maintains that the films included in the series
The films are screened in their original language with Spanish subtitles.
Full Schedule: CAAC Summer Film Program
All screenings will begin at 10:00 p.m., after sunset, and admission will be free until capacity is reached.
June 3 | DJ Ahmet
Georgi M. Unkovski (North Macedonia, 2025).
Ahmet, a 15-year-old boy from a remote Yuruk village in North Macedonia,
finds refuge in music. He does so while grappling with his father’s expectations, a conservative community, and his first experience with love: a girl already
betrothed to someone else.

June 10: The Perfect Recipe
Louise Courvoisier (France, 2024)
Totone, 18, spends most of his time drinking beer and partying
parties with his group of friends in the Jura region. But reality and misfortune
catch up with him, and he has to fend for himself and take care of his 7-year-old sister.
June 17: The Shadow of My Father
Akinola Davies (Nigeria/United Kingdom, 2025)
Over the course of a single day in Lagos, the capital of Nigeria, during the
of 1993, a father and his two young sons, from whom he is very
, travel through the vast city as political instability threatens their
return home.
June 24: The Broken Lines
Anxos Fazáns (Spain, 2025)
Bea is a 50-year-old woman who is separating from her husband. The day she
she has to leave the home where she has lived for the past twenty years, she arrives at her
home and finds everything turned upside down and one of the thieves asleep in her bed.

July 1: Sorry, Baby
Eva Victor (United States, 2025)
A young woman is going through a pivotal moment in her life marked by an extreme experience that has
profoundly altered her relationship with the world and with herself. Through a
fragmented narrative, the story follows her daily life, her silences, and her difficulty in
rebuilding personal bonds.
July 8: Little Amélie
Mailys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han Jin Kuang (France, 2025)
Until she was two and a half, Amélie described herself as an inert digestive tract and a vegetative
. Then comes the defining event that plunges her into the world
of childhood. Over the next six months, she discovers
language, parents, and siblings.
As part of the CAAC’s summer film series, bicycles will not be permitted in the auditorium area. Pets will also not be allowed inside the center, with the exception of guide dogs.