Film set: House from "The Goonies" sold to US businessman - who wants to open it to fans of the film

It's a cult film dear to many fans: 1985's 'The Goonies.

Film set: House from "The Goonies" sold to US businessman - who wants to open it to fans of the film

It's a cult film dear to many fans: 1985's 'The Goonies.' who were heroes for the rest of their lives. In addition to the young stars, an important role in the strip also played – a house.

In real life, the Victorian wooden house is located in the north-west of the US state of Oregon. And recently the owner, Sandi Preston, announced that she was moving and selling the famous property. This caused concern among many film fans - after all, the film is also about the fact that the idyllic neighborhood with its pretty, old-fashioned houses is in danger. A new owner who doesn't know what to do with the "Goonies" might simply have torn it down and put a new, larger building on the property. A nightmare for fans.

But everything turned out differently. Luckily. Because the house was bought by someone who is a huge fan of the 1985 film himself and plans to make the famous house accessible to "Goonies" lovers. It is a wealthy businessman from the state of Kansas, Behman Zakeri, who immediately contacted the seller when he heard that the building was on the market. The purchase may have cost him more than 1.6 million US dollars. He doesn't even want to live in it.

Rather, he would like to make the house a meeting place for "Goonies" fans. "Someone who's a real 'goonie' had to get it to make sure it didn't go away," he says. Now he wants to equip the building with objects from the film and open it to fans. For example, he's thinking about constructing a zipline like the character "Data" constructs in "The Goonies."

The businessman's ideas are well received by the actors in the cult film. Corey Feldmann, who played "Mouth," tweeted his heartfelt congratulations to Zakeri on the purchase. And Robert Davi, who played "Jake," wished for a celebration of the film's 40th anniversary — at the Oregon home.

What: "Los Angeles Times"

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