

At the end of 1972, industrialist Jaume Canivell financed a hunt with the assistance of important government officials and thus profited from his business. The hunt takes place on the Los Tejadillos estate, property of the Marquis José de Leguineche, a mature fetishist prone to not letting a single cent of his assets escape. In the spring of 1977, after Franco's death, the Marquis of Legineche, along with his closest entourage, decided to settle back into his semi-ruined Madrid palace, occupied by his legitimate wife, Eugenia, Countess of Santagón. The Marquis, willing to get money from under the stones and supported by his son, Luis José, his daughter-in-law, Chus, and the faithful servant for everything, Segundo, declares himself a National Heritage Site for the enjoyment of tourists who pay to admire it. In February 1981, the Marquis was forced to sell the palace at a low price and, in view of the Football World Cups, everyone contributed ideas with which to enrich themselves at the expense of future visitors. But, after the attempted coup d'état and with fear of the arrival of a socialist government, the Leguineches try to remove their capital and that of Chus, which they have just inherited, from Spain, posing as sick pilgrims to Lourdes.
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