This HTML5 document contains 30 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation.

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Subject Item
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Subject Item
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rdf:type
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rdfs:label
Flash-forward Flash-Forward
rdfs:comment
A flash-forward (or prolepsis, also sometimes known as a flash-ahead) in a narrative occurs when the primary sequence of events in a story is interrupted by the interjection of a scene representing an event expected, projected, or imagined to occur at a later time. The flash-forward technique is used less frequently than its reverse, the flashback, or the flash-sideways. The user can go to the future for seconds, minutes, days, months, etc. and return back to the present.
dcterms:subject
n7: n11: n12: n19: n26: n28: n30:
n27:
Move forward through time.
n10:
Power/Ability to:
n16:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n17: n23: n24: n25:
n3:
Flash-Forward
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3
n22:
When Curtis took ecstasy, he went forward through time
n13:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n14:
n18:
300
n4:
360
n21:
right
n9:
#353839
n31:
The third season finale introduced flash forwards to the show.
n15:abstract
A flash-forward (or prolepsis, also sometimes known as a flash-ahead) in a narrative occurs when the primary sequence of events in a story is interrupted by the interjection of a scene representing an event expected, projected, or imagined to occur at a later time. The flash-forward technique is used less frequently than its reverse, the flashback, or the flash-sideways. In Lost, the flash-forward technique was introduced in "Through the Looking Glass", although it wasn't made clear that it was a flash-forward until the end of the episode. The first episode to feature a flash-forward that was clearly shown to be one from the start was "The Beginning of the End". "Ji Yeon" was the first episode to intertwine flashbacks with flash-forwards, although the flashback element was only clearly revealed to be in the past at the end of the episode, making its temporality a plot twist. The user can go to the future for seconds, minutes, days, months, etc. and return back to the present.