Trying to echo Roman Holiday (the main couple drive a vespa alongside Firenze) the best thing about this picture is beautiful city of Firenze in the sixties and the title song. Acting is rather bad and you have the impression that neither Anette nor Tommy were much interested in their roles to make them believable. Plot is really weak and silly even for children- an architecture student meets an art student and falls for her while discover an art forgery ring involving some renaissance painting masterpieces -but could have been better if it wasn't for a poor script. Colour is not very good either. Annette sings several really bad chosen opera songs (Giuseppe Verdi's La Traviata duo) that do not fit her voice at all and even sings italian Funiculì-funiculà in a terrible English version that should had blushed their translators. While the original Italian song was written in 1880 to celebrate the opening of the Vesubian funicular, Annette's version totally changes lyrics to a love song (Dream boy). In addition to the main couple there is Italian actor Nino Castelnuovo (Les parapluies de Cherbourg) who sings and plays the guitar with Annette in a local restaurant. Loosely based on Edward Fenton's book The golden doors, the film runs heavily and slowly, it totally lacks of rhythm and that's a pity, since the scenery and a well written script would have included romance, excursions in Firenze's many museums and landscapes and songs that fit in -only the main title one does- would have much improved the movie. A faithful adaptation of Fenton's novel with a younger teenager actress like Hailey Mills would have been a much better option.