
Álvim Corrêa's War of the Worlds 1906 — Martian Aftermath Cellar Scene
In a shadowed cellar or tunnel passage, a ragged survivor stalks forward clutching a blunt weapon, his body taut with desperation and fury. Before him, a figure lies crumpled and motionless on the stone floor, surrounded by scattered debris and spreading dark pools. The scene captures a harrowing moment of human-on-human violence during the Martian invasion chaos — civilization stripped bare, survival instinct overriding all else. Álvim Corrêa's cross-hatched pen work drips with menace and psychological tension.
When the Martians didn't finish civilization off, men took up the job themselves — one desperate soul with a club and a dark cellar is all it takes. Corrêa shows you the ugliest truth of invasion: what humanity becomes when the veneer cracks.
“Alvim-Corrêa”





