He lives with ghosts: Ronaldo, a lady's man, Bartholomew, a friar, Flora, who died with love, and a five year old boy.
The ghosts call in an artist friend, Caparra, and try to get him to finish a painting so the castle is declared a national monument.
A writer on Rota's career analysed the score, saying that: The music for the credits... is supplied first by a sprightly modern jazz combo, then by a barrel organ.
[2]Variety said "pic is quaint but bogs down after some inventive early passages... special effects are good but without the film pacing to make them captivating throughout.
"[5] The Monthly Film Bulletin called it an "inoffensive comedy has a theme too slight and too lacking to be anything other than tedious when treated at such length.