Godfather fans rejoice! The real-life Tudor-style home that belonged to Michael Corleone in the 1972 flick is currently on the market for the first time in over 40 years. Elaine and Peter Albert, the current owners, snapped up the impressive brick-covered Staten Island abode for $195,000 back in 1977, and raised their three children within its iconic walls. The home is now listed for $1.37 million. “It was peaceful,” Elaine, now 73, tells the New York Post. “The [school] bus came to the corner. It was nothing like the movie.” She calls it “strange” to see Al Pacino, who played the highly violent Corleone, walking out of her front door in the flick. The home also served as the backdrop for one of the most iconic murder scenes in the much-revered mafia film. Carlo Rizzi, a character played by actor Gianni Russo, was strangled by a member of the Corleone family while sitting in the front seat of a car right in front of the house. Though he has rather graphic memories from the set, Russo also has plenty of fun ones as well, he tells the Post. “The actors used to challenge each other to see who could do the better improv,” he says of hanging out at the house between takes. “In that living room, I saw Al Pacino do an improvisation of a one-legged golfer. He bent over to put the ball on the tee, and he fell over.”

120 Longfellow Ave, Staten Island, NY. Courtesy of Realtor.com

The home consists of four bedrooms and two and a half bathrooms and spans roughly 3,012 square feet. Though some of the details of the home now differ from when it first appeared on screen the arched front door is no longer white, for instance—many of the original details remain, including the front gate, the impressive stained glass windows, and even the address plate itself. Wood paneled walls in some of the rooms add a sense of warmth, and a total of three stone fireplaces are located throughout the home. There are chandeliers in each of the four bedrooms, with gold trim in the bathrooms for an added touch of opulence. The basement was recently redone and now features its own exterior entry access point, with the foundation for another bathroom readily available in case the new owner wants to create an addition.

The back patio. Courtesy of Realtor.com

Since the property went on the market (the listing can be found on Realtor.com), broker John A. Vernazza says there have been quite a few Godfather fans scoping out the home, “quoting all sorts of lines [from the film],” he told the Post. Two other homes in the neighborhood also have ties to the flick: A neighboring property served as the home for Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando), while another was used as the set of the lavish wedding scene, with children from the neighborhood being tapped to be extras.