A transition (in literary or theatrical works or films) to a later event or scene that interrupts the normal chronological development of the story.
1Is this some kind of flash-forward to a future without zombies?
2The identity of the body in the coffin from Jack's flash-forward will be revealed.
3The flash-forward left me with a million questions.
4The story begins with a dramatic flash-forward.
5A spokesman for the comics said the events in the flash-forward series will not affect Archie in the present-day series.
6And the flash-forward that begins the episode doesn't tell us anything we don't know: that it ends with a wall.
7Centred on the formidable school teacher and her group of six students, the author uses prolepsis, or flash-forward sequences, to drive the narrative.
8Even the reveal that the flash-forward to Rick leaning on a tree, nursing a nasty-looking wound, turns out to have been leading to absolutely nothing.
9Here's the kicker: In a flash-forward, Annalise is found in her client's estate lying on the floor in a puddle of blood after being shot.
10Flash-forward 20 years, he once again proved his talent on prime-time television.
11For all the flash-forwards and flashbacks, the overarching narrative is familiar corporate-noir.
12We see splitscreens and flashbacks and flash-forwards and Sliding Doors-style what-if?
13Flash-forward to now and that is indeed my job title.
14Flash-forward 15 months, and Jackson's image in the public consciousness has undergone a dramatic revision.
15I surprised myself at how gendered my flash-forwards were.
16Flash-forward to the morning game drive, where I was still rather disturbed by the previous night's sighting.