[3] At an isolated country house during World War II, AWOL Nazi soldiers indulge in orgiastic behavior with prostitutes.
While viewing the film, the Germans revels are brought to an end when Allied bombs land on the villa, destroying it.
Six teenagers (van driver Mark, and his friends Paul, John, Anne, Celine, and Maria) are driving to Paris after a touring holiday in the countryside.
That night, Willy, the young Nazi soldier who filmed the orgy, emerges from a mirror and seduces Anne as she sleeps alone in a room.
Maria retreats to a room where a ghost prostitute attempts to seduce her and sow seeds of anxiety in her by saying that her lover, Anne, is cheating on her with Celine.
Looking for a way out, Paul and John find a can of film in the cellar, which seems to hold the key to the ghosts power.
As Mark's corpse rots before their eyes, they hear footsteps of the approaching Nazi ghosts.
The four surviving teens flee into the parlor, and decide to play the film to solve the mystery of the supernatural occurrences.
[5] The film was part of a series titled I maestri del thriller that was aimed directly at television and home video release.
[5] Producer Carlo Alberto Alfieri presented the project to Luciano Martino who rejected it, and later made a deal with August Caminito's Scena International.
[5] Caminito's company then contacted Distribuzione Alpha Cinematographica and Cine Duck and sold television rights to the series to Reteitalia.
[7] This led to nude scenes where her character is seduced by a Nazi ghost being shot with a body double.
"[9] J.C. Maçek III of WorldsGreatestCritic.com wrote, "I can just see ol' Lucio Fulci (who both directed and co-wrote this mess) sitting down in front of the Sylvania Super Set with a legal pad and watching the syndicated re-runs of The New Scooby-Doo Mysteries and taking copious notes while saying things like 'This show is great!