Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Crushed Human, War of the Worlds 1906
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Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Crushed Human, War of the Worlds 1906

A helpless human figure is crushed and ensnared between two massive alien forms in this nightmarish pen-and-ink scene. Signed by Henrique Alvim Corrêa, this interior illustration from the 1906 Belgian edition of H.G. Wells' 'La Guerre des Mondes' captures the terrifying scale disparity between humanity and the Martian invaders. The man lies pinned, his limbs splayed in desperation, while enormous tentacled or fleshy alien masses loom over him with grotesque, ear-like appendages. Pure biological horror rendered in meticulous crosshatch.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Henrique Alvim Corrêa
Era: Edwardian (1901-1914)
Decade: 1900s
Country: Belgium
Coolness: 7/10

Corrêa's draftsmanship elevates alien horror to something genuinely unsettling — this isn't lurid pulp spectacle, it's methodical dread. The intimacy of the composition, one frail human crushed between two indifferent alien masses, is more disturbing than any ray-gun firefight.

Text in image:

Alvim-Correa

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