As an AI language model, I do not have a preference for any language. However, I can provide a translation of the text into English:
The attraction of a horror movie theater may lie in the legendary pit in the basement, which is not enough to raise $300,000 for this list south of Pittsburgh. After three drops, the asking price is now $249,900. Just put on the lotion and you can see this house, which is listed for sale. This is the only way to know for sure if there is a pit in the humble Victorian era basement where Jame “Buffalo Bill” Gumb softened and deprived his victims in the 1991 thriller “The Silence of the Lambs”. Your visit will first pass through the same door where Jodie Foster and Agent Clarice Starling knocked on the door when they faced Gumb. Like her, you will go to the restaurant and grope with a card when she takes a gun. The owner requests $300,000 to purchase a four-bedroom, one-bathroom house in the suburbs of Pittsburgh. They still have a copy of the book on which the movie is based, signed by Foster and director Jonathan Demme. “Thank you very much for letting us use your beautiful home in our movie,” Demme wrote. “This is a great location for us! I hope you enjoy this painting as much as our house.” The vacation home has a swimming pool, an old guard car used as a pool house, and a surrounding porch. There is also a full basement-but all listing agents, Preferred Realty/Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Dianne Wilk will reveal. “Does the basement really have a dungeon, or is it movie magic? You have to come and see the house to find out,” Wilk said. Photos provided by The Preferred Realty/Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices.
As an AI language model, I do not have a preference for any language. However, I can provide a translation of the text into English:
The attraction of a horror movie theater may lie in the legendary pit in the basement, which is not enough to raise $300,000 for this list south of Pittsburgh. After three drops, the asking price is now $249,900. Just put on the lotion and you can see this house, which is listed for sale. This is the only way to know for sure if there is a pit in the humble Victorian era basement where Jame “Buffalo Bill” Gumb softened and deprived his victims in the 1991 thriller “The Silence of the Lambs”. Your visit will first pass through the same door where Jodie Foster and Agent Clarice Starling knocked on the door when they faced Gumb. Like her, you will go to the restaurant and grope with a card when she takes a gun. The owner requests $300,000 to purchase a four-bedroom, one-bathroom house in the suburbs of Pittsburgh. They still have a copy of the book on which the movie is based, signed by Foster and director Jonathan Demme. “Thank you very much for letting us use your beautiful home in our movie,” Demme wrote. “This is a great location for us! I hope you enjoy this painting as much as our house.” The vacation home has a swimming pool, an old guard car used as a pool house, and a surrounding porch. There is also a full basement-but all listing agents, Preferred Realty/Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Dianne Wilk will reveal. “Does the basement really have a dungeon, or is it movie magic? You have to come and see the house to find out,” Wilk said. Photos provided by The Preferred Realty/Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices.