- A pet baby alligator is flushed down a toilet and survives in the city sewers. Twelve years later, it grows to an enormous size thanks to a diet of discarded laboratory dogs injected with growth hormones. Now, humans have entered the menu.
- Ramon the alligator is flushed down the toilet as a baby and grows into a gargantuan monster by eating the corpses of laboratory animals that have undergone dubious hormone experiments, thus providing all the ecological and social subtext that one could possibly wish for, even if one doesn't normally go for films about giant alligators eating people left, right, and center--which is the inevitable and tragic result of Ramon's decision that the outside world looks rather more interesting than the sewers..—Michael Brooke <[email protected]>
- A teenage girl's pet baby alligator is flushed down the toilet by her animal-phobic father and it ends up in the city's sewers. Fast forward 12 years, and the alligator survives by feeding on carcasses thrown in the sewer that were used as test subjects for an experimental growth hormone and for anabolic formulas. Because of the effects of the hormones, the alligator has grown massively huge, with a thick skin and an insatiable appetite, and it begins devouring sewer workers that it encounters in the sewer.—[email protected]
- A baby alligator is flushed into the sewers. It survives for years undetected by feasting on dead animals that were exposed to growth formulas and unwary humans who have ventured into the sewers. After years of non-stop eating, the young alligator has transformed into a monstrous 36-foot-long creature with an insatiable appetite. Now it's up to a world-weary detective and a herpetologist to stop the beast from going on a rampage.
- The film opens with a little girl attending an alligator stunt show with her parents on a vacation in Florida. The crowd watches as people perform daredevil interactions with the gators until one of them gets taken by surprise and is mauled by one of them. The crowd responds with lurid fascination, and the proprietors of the attraction are selling baby alligators to the patrons. The little girl buys one and takes it home with her to Chicago, where she places it in an aquarium and names it Ramon. Her friendship with Ramon is short-lived, however, when her father flushes Ramon down the toilet in a fit of rage about something. Ramon emerges in the Chicago sewers intact.
The film flashes forward 12 years later), where we meet a Chicago police detective named David Madison (Robert Forster), who is a cop trying to make good again after a bungled operation that left his partner dead. Human body parts start showing up in the city's water filtration systems, and Madison takes a young rookie down into the sewer to investigate for signs of foul play. While they are down there, they get attacked by the culprit: an enormous alligator is living in the sewers, presumably Ramon, now grown to a monstrous length of 36 feet. Madison escapes but his partner is killed by the gator, leading to more suspicion and the possible ruination of his career.
He enlists the aid of Marisa Kendall (Robin Riker), a zoologist specializing in reptiles; she happens to be the little girl from the introduction, the one who was so interested in alligators and whose father flushed her pet down the toilet. At first she is skeptical and refuses to believe that an alligator could survive in the sewers of Chicago, but another victim disappears in the sewers, and his camera is turned up with photographic evidence of the monster.
Madison links the mysterious activity in the sewer to a pharmaceutical company performing experiments with hormones. The company has been injecting dogs with serum intended to accelerate their growth. When finished with their specimens, mostly dogs that have been acquired by illegal means and killed in the process, they give the carcasses to a shady character who dumps them into the sewer. Hence, the alligator has been feeding on these dead dogs for years, consuming the growth hormones within them, and therefore growing to gigantic proportions.
Eventually, the alligator, disturbed by all the sudden activity in its area of the sewer, emerges from underground and rampages through the city. Many people are attacked, and although Madison has been lambasted by the police force, he is out to get the alligator for revenge.
The city makes numerous attempts to stop the gator, including a pompous big-game hunter they enlist to kill it. The plan backfires when the gator ambushes the hunter in an alley and eats him. In an ironic turn of events, the owner of the pharmaceutical company finds a black-tie event at his mansion interrupted by a visit from the monstrous gator, which attacks a number of his party guests and kills him in his own limousine.
Finally Madison and Marisa enact a plan when the alligator makes its way back to the sewer; Madison follows him down there with a bomb, and Marisa stays topside to make sure Madison's exit manhole stays clear. Madison is almost killed when a woman stops her car right on top of the manhole and blocks his exit, but they manage to get him out in the nick of time. Ramon is blown to smithereens when the bomb goes off, but we see another baby alligator emerge in the sewer from a drainpipe, presumably flushed down there by another unfriendly owner.
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