^^^That could be. It doesn't physically work, partly because Nina stabbing anyone with a broken piece of glass without cutting her hands is impossible. That can't be conclusive because the movie just isn't made with that kind of condescension to reality. Also, by that interpretation, when Nina looks behind the towel and sees nothing, that would mean she is hallucinating the absence of blood. Technically this is possible, but the whole mad shtick is for thrills and chills. Most of all, naturally, there's the general nuttiness of someone with a mortal wound dancing a ballet, which is on par with someone really dying of tuberculosis singing.
Even more confusing in one way, is that if Nina really stabs herself while stabbing, as she thinks, Lily, then Lily is in fact just herself, as suggested above. This is confusing because a huge part of Nina's problem is her decompensating lust for Lily. We've all heard of autoeroticism but that is really stretching a concept.
I didn't understand what happened when the dancer dropped Nina. So I don't understand why everyone else would look at Nina, if they were (the choreographer suddenly goes into his first language, just to make things more confusing.) Nor do I understand why this should trigger the appearance of EvilNinaInTheGuiseOfLily. But the incident is critical to the stabbing, whoever was stabbed, in reality or only in imagination.
Even more confusing in one way, is that if Nina really stabs herself while stabbing, as she thinks, Lily, then Lily is in fact just herself, as suggested above. This is confusing because a huge part of Nina's problem is her decompensating lust for Lily. We've all heard of autoeroticism but that is really stretching a concept.
I didn't understand what happened when the dancer dropped Nina. So I don't understand why everyone else would look at Nina, if they were (the choreographer suddenly goes into his first language, just to make things more confusing.) Nor do I understand why this should trigger the appearance of EvilNinaInTheGuiseOfLily. But the incident is critical to the stabbing, whoever was stabbed, in reality or only in imagination.