Got a spare $165 million? This could be the house for you. Actually, calling it a house doesn't do it justice. It's a 72,000-square-foot, six-building, six-and-a-half-acre Beverly Hills estate once owned by newspaper baron William Randolph Hearst -- and that asking price is the highest ever for a residential property in the United States. Broker Stephen Shapiro isn't worried about finding a buyer. "It will sell at or above that price," he says. One reason he may be right: The house is known to millions because its exterior was used in The Godfather to establish the posh setting for the infamous horse head scene. Who knows, Shapiro may even get an all-cash bid, thereby dodging the current mortgage crisis. Now, that would be an offer he couldn't refuse!
By the Numbers
1 Disco
3 Swimming Pools
29 Bedrooms
41 Bathrooms
10 hours
Estimated time to give all bathrooms a quick cleaning
$87 million
Box office take for The Godfather (made for $6 million)
Other Stuff Worth $165 million
Boeing 787 Dreamliner passenger jet
Bill Clinton Presidential Library
All the maple syrup Canada exports per year
NASA's Mars Polar Lander
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