An iconic Scarface mansion has hit the Miami market for $237 million, cementing hip-hop’s influence on the legendary film’s enduring legacy.
Al Pacino didn’t expect “Hip” to save his most iconic film, but that’s exactly what happened in “Scarface.”
The 1983 crime drama was initially panned by critics and underperformed at the box office, but it became a cultural phenomenon that is still referenced in rap lyrics decades later.
Now, the legendary Miami mansion featured in the movie is on the market for a staggering $237 million, its value inextricably linked to the hip-hop community’s love of the film.
The white, postmodern estate sits on 2.38 acres on Biscayne Bay and has 868 feet of oceanfront, a marina, a 20,000-square-foot helipad and a piano-shaped swimming pool.
The 13,000-square-foot home includes five bedrooms, floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Biscayne Bay, and a steel-and-glass elevator that’s instantly recognizable to anyone who’s seen the movie.
This elevator is the centerpiece of one of the film’s most memorable scenes, in which Tony Montana visits his new boss’s home and watches Elvira descend in a see-through elevator.
Rappers have been referencing this purely visual form of storytelling ever since.
According to Deadline , the property was built around 1981 by Roberto Striedinger, a pilot convicted of smuggling cocaine for the Medellin cartel.
Anyone familiar with the movie’s plot will not miss the irony.
The estate also appears in the closing credits of Miami Vice as part of Richard Nixon’s “Winter White House” compound in the early 1970s, although the bungalow where Nixon originally lived has since been demolished.
What makes this list a hip-hop story is that even though mainstream audiences rejected Scarface, rappers still embraced it.
Countless rappers have incorporated “Scarface” into their images and music, turning the box-office disappointment into a touchstone for a generation.
If the property sells for close to asking price, it will easily become the most expensive property ever sold in Miami-Dade County, surpassing Mark Zuckerberg’s $170 million purchase from March.
