For generations of movie lovers, the hillside Victorian home overlooking Astoria, Oregon is more than just a house — it is a portal to childhood adventure. In late 2025, that sense of wonder came rushing back when Kelly Clarkson toured the fully restored Goonies House during a special segment of The Kelly Clarkson Show, calling the experience “a childhood dream come true.”
The home, instantly recognizable as the Walsh family residence from The Goonies, sits above the coastal town of Astoria. Originally built in 1896, the house underwent an extraordinary, movie-accurate restoration ahead of the film’s 40th anniversary in 2025. Clarkson was guided through the property by its current owner, Behman Zakeri, a lifelong fan who purchased the home for approximately $1.65 million in 2023 with a singular goal: preservation, not profit.
Engineering Movie Magic Back to Life
The most jaw-dropping moment of Clarkson’s tour — and the clip that quickly went viral — was the demonstration of a fully functional Rube Goldberg machine. In the original film, the device was a chaotic, mostly symbolic contraption used to open the front gate. In the restored version, it actually works.
Zakeri collaborated with Emmy-winning set designer James Pearse Connelly to bring the machine to life from start to finish. As Kelly watched with visible delight, the sequence triggered levers, pulleys, and rolling elements before finally opening the iconic front gate — the exact spot where Jeff Cohen performed the unforgettable “Truffle Shuffle.”
Obsession-Level Accuracy
The restoration went far beyond surface-level nostalgia. Using archival materials from Warner Bros., Zakeri and Connelly matched the original wallpaper patterns, paint tones, fence distressing, and even interior props seen in the 1985 film directed by Richard Donner. The result is less a renovation and more a time capsule — a “living museum” dedicated to the Goondocks.
Completed over more than two years, the project debuted during the 40th Anniversary Goonies Weekend in June 2025, drawing thousands of fans to Astoria. During peak summer months, the house now attracts up to 1,500 visitors per day, cementing its status as one of the most beloved filming locations in the United States.
Stewardship, Not Ownership
What moved Clarkson most wasn’t just the craftsmanship, but Zakeri’s philosophy. “I don’t feel like I own this house,” he told her. “I feel like I’m the caretaker for everyone who ever wanted to be a Goonie.”
As Kelly left the porch, she summed up the experience with a smile and misty eyes: watching that gate open again made her feel ten years old. And just like the movie promised — Goonies really do never say die.