
Henrique Alvim Corrêa – Martian Fighting Machine Over the Channel, 1906
Embodying the dread atmosphere of Wellsian invasion literature, this haunting charcoal-toned illustration depicts a towering Martian tripod war machine striding across the English Channel, its distinctive hooded disc silhouette looming against a stormy, smoke-choked sky. Water churns below as vaporous heat-ray tendrils drift from its undercarriage. Corrêa's masterful chiaroscuro technique transforms H.G. Wells's alien invader into something genuinely monstrous — less mechanical marvel than apocalyptic specter rising from a Victorian nightmare.
A single frame that encapsulates an entire planetary conquest — the lone machine over churning water communicates overwhelming scale and existential dread with minimal elements. The atmospheric darkness amplifies the sense of hopelessness that defines Wells's novel.
“A Martian fighting machine over the Channel.”





