Jack Carter creditado como jogando...
Mayor
- [they're overlooking a footprint]
- Marisa: This is amazing. I mean, according to this, it should be 30 to 40 feet long.
- David: But it is an alligator.
- Mayor: David. This is Colonel Brock--
- [explosions are heard]
- Col. Brock: What the hell is that?
- Chief Clark: We're setting off charges to see if we can bring him up.
- Col. Brock: It's a wild animal, not a submarine.
- Mayor: I've flown in Colonel Brock to take charge of the operation.
- David: Take charge?
- Mayor: Yeah, well, he's hunted big game animals all over the world.
- Chief Clark: It's a new ballgame, Dave.
- David: What the hell do you expect me to do?
- Col. Brock: You just stay out from under my feet.
- David: Start right now, guys.
- [He walks off]
- Mayor: Now, look, Madison...
- Marisa: You know, it's not his fault the alligator got loose.
- Col. Brock: Who is this pretty girl?
- Chief Clark: Oh, Colonel Brock, this is Dr. Kendall. She's the...
- Col. Brock: Oh, yes, the lizard lady. Welcome and now you can go back to your books.
- Marisa: You'd better take all the help you can get. You know, I've seen what this animal can do.
- Col. Brock: Well, if I couldn't get myself killed chasing it, what fun would it be?
- Chief Clark: The safety of the public is my job!
- Mayor: Well, you've got no job unless I get reelected. Now, look, this could generate a lot of good publicity. And I can't have your people fumble the ball for us. And that's all.
- Reporter 1: Thomas Kemp, popular columnist for the National Probe Magazine is missing and presumed dead. His camera, the only clue to his disappearance, was fished out of a filtration tank at the city sewage works late last night. The film inside the camera was salvaged
- [David changes the channel]
- Newswoman: What appeared to be an abnormally large alligator or similar reptile who is now believed to be responsible for at least four deaths.
- [David changes the channel again]
- Mayor: But as mayor, I tell you that no effort and no expense will be spared by this--
- [David changes the channel again]
- Madeline: Professor, herpetologist, author, and probably the leading authority here in the Midwest on reptile and amphibian life, as well as a native of our own city, Dr. Kendall, what animal is it?
- Marisa: It's an alligator.
- Madeline: Couldn't it be a...
- Marisa: There's no question. It's definitely an alligator.
- Madeline: I see. Well how large do you think it is from the photographs you've seen?
- Marisa: If it's been living in the sewer, it couldn't be very large. Even under ideal circumstances, in a zoo for example, they don't grow nearly as large as they would in their natural habitat.
- [David turns off the TV]
- David: [looking over a map of the city] this makes it one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine... 13...
- [looks at a toy alligator on the map]
- David: Where are you?
- Mayor: Oh, Mr Slade, I'd have to go to the City Council for a reward.
- Slade: Now common now, let's stop fussing. I'll put up the money. I'll put up the money. Listen, the wedding is tomorrow. I want you to pick up all this silver, all the tables, put 'em back the way it should be later.
- Mayor: Look, that's very generous of you, Mr. Slade.
- Slade: Mayor, listen, we have got four products, four products pending with the Food and Drug Administration right now. Four products. And that's a lot of politics involved.
- Mayor: Oh, I see. And if they traced it back to the company...
- Slade: You mean if they traced it back here to us?
- Mayor: Yeah.
- Slade: Well you'd be out of a job for one thing. Arthur. Mayor Ledeux, my future son-in-law, Arthur Hill.
- Mayor: Oh, how you do?
- Scientist Arthur Helms: Nice to meet you.
- Slade: Arthur is my number one boy.
- Mayor: Oh.
- Slade: My number one boy, yes, sir.