by vicster111 » 26 Nov 2010
I think different levels of reality/dreams are worth thinking about. I remember asking questions about what appears to be Rita's dreams within Diane's (something that's commonly noted), and also about flashbacks within flashbacks.
eg. Is it possible to view Diane at the dinner party flashing back to the Winkie's scene? What are the ramifications of that? Or are all the flashbacks jumping both back AND forwards in the mind of Diane on the couch?
I just wanna make clear that under my theory we are not shown who is originally dreaming/daydreaming/imagining. Therefore, the whole film is an imagination within an imagination within an imagination, etc. The person who's life is in jeopardy is the original person, because the person they imagined has imagined yet another person, and this second imagined person has imagined yet another person. Dreaming, daydreaming and imagining is what keeps the cycle going further. Once the final imagined person snaps out of their reverie/dream and stops their imagination, then the person who has imagined them can now snap out of/awake from their reverie, and so on. Going back to the original person.
Like I mentioned before, imagine a Russian doll with another doll inside, and that doll has another doll inside, and so on. The outermost doll would represent the original 'dreamer'. The doll furthest inside represents the last person imagined. Once the innermost doll 'awakes' then the doll surrounding it can wake, and once this one wakes, then the doll surrounding it can wake. If at any time one of the dolls does not want to wake, then Aunt Ruth, who had created the dream within which they want to stay, will have to turn this beautiful dream into a nightmare. This usually makes the doll want to wake. She will take whatever measures are necessary to wake the doll (even drive it to suicide) so that eventually the waking cycle will return to the original dreamer. Allowing them to wake.
To create an imagination all one needs to do is sleep (and then dream), kick back with their feet on the couch and stare at the ceiling, have a fleeting thought, lay in bed and stare at a wall, etc.
Diane refuses to snap out of her reverie and let the person who imagined her snap out of their reverie. This is, ultimately, keeping the original 'dreamer' from waking up. They will die if they can't. They will lay there and rot and become the corpse that we saw. A sleeping beauty that never wakes.
Because Diane absolutely refuses to snap out of it, wake up, Aunt Ruth is forced to make Diane's 'dream place' so absolutely horrible that she will take her own life. Aunt Ruth has tried knocking, ringing, sounding alarms, breaking glass, banging pots, screeching wheels, etc. but Diane is not responding. She's still in the reverie. Aunt Ruth tried making the 'dream place' a not so pleasant place to be. Diane still won't snap out of it. So now Aunt Ruth has to make Diane believe that she has done something terrible. And make Diane believe that Camilla (the reason she wants to stay in the 'dream place') is a serious witch. She's turning Diane's 'dream place' into hell.
Some will remember that we see Diane rise from bed after we see the corpse. (And this reminds me, even the Cowboy couldn't get her to snap out of it.) Diane did not rise from sleep. She was laying there awake. How do I know this? Two reasons:
-Joe asks Laney "You'll keep your eyes open for me, won't you baby?"
-Right before Rita comes to the bedroom doorway in her wig and towel, we see Betty laying there staring at the ceiling. Diane likes to pretend she's asleep. She would have to pretend constantly in order not to 'snap out'. That's why we get the impression that she can't stop because of a mental problem. Being awake for so long is why Diane looks so crappy in her white robe.