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Take a Look Inside the Sexiest 100 Million Dollar Mansion

We all know that sex sells, it has been this way for a very long time and if you do it right, it really works with everything.

The real estate developer and Skyline Development CEO Nile Niami knows that this is utterly true.

This is why he used this and made some provocative marketing campaigns to sell mountainside estates.

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The newest residence he is looking to sell is called Opus and the marketing for it will have you in a sort of erotic trance that will make you want to buy it as soon as possible, assuming you have that kind of money, of course.

According to forbes.com, Niami (the producer of Steven Seagal’s film The Patriot) has curated over-the-top blockbuster mansions bought by P. Diddy, the Winklevoss twins and other modern design-loving billionaires.

Niami’s mansions (typically in ritzy Bel Air and Beverly Hills) are the sleek, high-tech kind in which debonair movie heroes like James Bond or Thomas Crown would seduce damsels or rev up exotic car engines—sometimes, simultaneously.

Niami built one Beverly Hills home with an auto showroom-style spinning “car turntable” that’s visible from the living room space.

His most controversial estate is “The One,” an outrageous $500 million spec mega mansion (by architect Paul McClean) currently under construction in Bel Air—which critics claim is so big it should get “commercial” status.

As a Hollywood veteran, Niami embraces controversy. He sells blockbuster estates like hit movies—big name neighborhoods, compelling narratives and extraordinary features to be marketed and sold emotionally.

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Even beautiful mansions are stale if you don’t rock the boat a little.

But add gorgeous models, illuminated zero-edge pools, open-air comfort, and spectacular Los Angeles views—you’ve got a summer smash.

Niami’s current project (prequel to “The One”) is “Opus,” an über contemporary Beverly Hills spec mansion on North Hillcrest Road’s tony cul-de-sac (a.k.a “Billionaire’s Row”)—which at $100 million, hits the unlisted market for the price of a military jet.

Opus is Beverly Hill’s priciest home, also designed by Paul McClean and exclusively represented by Drew Fenton of Hilton & Hyland, broker from last year’s Playboy Mansion sale. Opus is currently seen by appointment only.

What makes this 20,500-square-foot mansion unique, besides its cappuccino faucet and car museum, is its marketing campaign.

Opus was unveiled via a risqué Rated-R trailer targeting deep-pocket billionaires and voyeuristic cyber junkies who can only afford it in their dreams.

The peep-hole effect is essentially same for every viewer—scantily clad models posing and presenting the home’s sexy features like after hours Cinemax meets The Price Is Right.

Actually, TV and game shows are too tame for this comparison. The sultry Opus trailer is bigger budget, higher society.

Think Cleopatra meets Eyes Wide Shut—bizzarely sensual, mysterious, with semi-nude masquerading gold-tinged models showcasing luxurious spaces.

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