Want to live in Harry Potters childhood home, or the horses head mansion from The Godfather? Theres an estate agent awaiting your call …
Poor old Harry Potter. As if being orphaned by a monomaniacal necromancer and forced to grow up in a cupboard under the stairs wasnt bad enough, it has now been revealed that the Boy Who Lived spent his formative years in Bracknell.
A three-bedroom house used to film the first Potter movie, Harry Potter and the Philosophers Stone, is on sale for 475,000. Situated in Martins Heron, a suburb of the town named the fourth ugliest in the UK in 2013, the house doubled for 4 Privet Drive, Little Whinging in the Potter film saga.
If you dont fancy a future sweeping keen Potter fans off your doorstep in the Berkshire suburbs, here are some other properties recently on sale that you might recognise from the movies.
Known as the Beverly House, this 30-bedroom, 40-bathroom estate, previously owned by William Randolph Hearst, doubled as the mansion where stubborn movie producer Jack Woltz awoke to discover his equine bedfellow in Francis Ford Coppolas 1972 mob epic. Just a few blocks from gilded Sunset Boulevard, the mansion also featured in The Bodyguard, and has hosted parties for Rihanna and Prince Albert of Monaco. Currently up for sale, the six-acre estate, which features a 50,000sq ft main house and cascading waterfalls down to an ornate swimming pool, is expected to cost its eventual purchaser upwards of $175m (135m).
On sale in 2013 for 4m, Bloxworth House in Dorset featured as the home of vivacious landowner and proto-feminist Bathsheba Everdeen in John Schlesingers 1967 adaptation of the 1874 Thomas Hardy novel. The Grade I-listed manor house, set in eight acres of magnificent parkland, has eight bedrooms, a walled garden, a three-bedroom staff cottage, wine cellars, a swimming pool and a tennis court.
This Pennsylvanian property may not have a murder dungeon in the basement, but it was used to shoot interior and exterior scenes in Jonathan Demmes Oscar-winning 1991 film. In summer 2015, Scott and Barbara Lloyd were asking $300,000 for the three-storey 19th-century house in Layton, Fayette county. They dropped the asking price to $250,000 that December, and sold it in July 2016 for $195,000.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/film/2016/sep/21/movie-homes-up-for-sale-harry-potter-godfather