Wes Anderson has designed a café for the Fondazione Prada in Milan — and it is pretty much what you would expect from the The Grand Budapest Hotel director.

Recreating the atmosphere of a typical Milanese café from the ‘50s and ‘60s, Bar Luce comes complete with Steve Zissou and Castello Cavalcanti-themed pinball machines.

“While I do think it would make a pretty good movie set, I think it would be an even better place to write a movie,” Anderson is quoted as saying on the foundation’s website. “I tried to make it a bar I would want to spend my own non-fictional afternoons in.”

The furniture, menus and even some of the dishes served are in the pastel greens and pinks that were prominent in Italian pop culture of the decade. The café’s style draws on Italian classics such as Vittorio De Sica’s Miracle in Milan, (1951), and Luchino Visconti’s Rocco and His Brothers, (1960), according to the foundation’s website.

Anderson’s short film Castello Cavalcanti features the same green tabletops.

Run by Miuccia Prada and Patrizio Bertelli, the Fondazione Prada has hosted numerous art and cultural exhibits in spaces around Milan over the last two decades. The foundation unveiled its new permanent home, including Bar Luce, in Milan on May 9, 2015.