I completely misunderstood the ending. Did she kill her husband and family? Or was there no husband and family at all and it always seemed to her that the painting was mocking her? But she went to jail for something. Hardly for killing their own copies - they were not tangible. I'm a niponel, in general.
@shei350: That's not really the point here. In fact, the girl was not in any prison and did not kill anyone. Here is an allegory to the fact that all her life she acted solely according to her mother's will, and whenever she wanted to do her own thing (Go play with a ball, instead of playing the koto. Or run away from the viewing to the person who loved her), she suppressed her actions, and thereby killed the possibilities. The prison is metaphorical, in which she locked herself up, they say, "serves me right!" Well, was that guy really in love with her? Or did she make it up? I think everyone decides for themselves here.
@AlmatorVerlano: there was no boyfriend in love, it was another incarnation of her. Prison and a failed marriage, it seems to me, are in ordinary reality (even though the pharmacist twists these realities as he pleases). The moment when she finally lost her mind was marriage (the last memories of her mother, separation from the man from whom she was completely dependent and without whose control she was unable to live). And then, if we take as a basis the principles of our reality, the girl has a moment of aggravation, and she, seeing herself in all the members of the new family, kills them, goes to prison. And then what we have seen begins.
Did she kill her husband and family? Or was there no husband and family at all and it always seemed to her that the painting was mocking her? But she went to jail for something. Hardly for killing their own copies - they were not tangible. I'm a niponel, in general.
Well, was that guy really in love with her? Or did she make it up? I think everyone decides for themselves here.
The moment when she finally lost her mind was marriage (the last memories of her mother, separation from the man from whom she was completely dependent and without whose control she was unable to live). And then, if we take as a basis the principles of our reality, the girl has a moment of aggravation, and she, seeing herself in all the members of the new family, kills them, goes to prison. And then what we have seen begins.