Which fictional mystery would you like to be solved?

“Wasn’t John Saxon in this film?”-MST3K version of ‘Mitchell’

I’d like to know the answer to this one too.

What WAS the frequency, Kenneth?

What happened between Picard and Guinan before TNG began?

Who is the Doctor?

Why do fools fall in love?

Where’s the beef?

How do the 3 seashells work?

Is Annie okay?

“Two riders were approaching, the wind began to howl.”

Who were the two riders?

He sang for the king and queen. So who was the king then? I can’t see the king and queen as Elvis and Joannie. Doesn’t really work.

I’ve been pondering the “Giant Rat of Sumatra” since I was 11 years old.

So, which was it? The lady, or the tiger?

Ah, yes, my mistake. Well, sometimes the jester does shtup the queen. :slight_smile:

Who really killed K’mpec in Star Trek: The Next Generation? We’re led to believe that it was Duras, but all we really know is that one of his men was a suicide bomber during the Son’chi ceremony. I wouldn’t put it past either Duras or Gowron to have poisoned K’mpec.

What was in the trunk of the 1964 Chevrolet Malibu in Repo Man? Alien tech? What’s the backstory of how it got into the trunk?

Is the hokey-pokey really what it’s all about? Sounds good… but, upon contemplation, I am starting to have my doubts.

And what was the “great wrong” that Judith’s man once did Flora’s father?

Who DID shoot the deputy?

Maybe you’ll find out in the forthcoming revival.
Of all the stuff on Lost, the only thing that really left me feeling unsatisfied in the end is they never told us what the deal was with Libby. And they were going to tell that until the stupid writers strike ruined it.

Is that NOT in FWWM? /*** is assaulting both of them and while it’s distracted with Laura, Ronette is released.

In the movie Fargo, we start with the knowledge that the main character needs money. He tries various schemes to get it. The schemes go wrong and a wood chipper is eventually called upon to get things straightened out.

Every time I watch the film, I always wonder why the guy needed the money so badly. He’d fiddled with the inventory of his car lot. That needed to get sorted. But, that wouldn’t have been the original problem. That was just another of his half-way-thought-through methods of delaying financial doom due to his original problem.

If it was an addiction, such as gambling or alcohol, he never showed any subsequent signs. So, we’re left without our central motivation. It’s weird.

Look up the Frank Stockton short story “His Wife’s Deceased Sister.” New perspective on the author, and you’ll stop caring about this question.

It’s a sort of MacGuffin. A plot device.