
Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Martian Tripod Heat-Ray, War of the Worlds 1906
A towering Martian fighting-machine strides through a devastated English landscape, unleashing a blinding heat-ray that scatters fleeing human figures like insects. Henrique Alvim Corrêa's masterwork crackles with apocalyptic energy — the tripod's saucer hood bristles with tentacle-like appendages, while bodies litter the scorched foreground and a church tower crumbles in the background. The sepia-toned ink wash technique gives the carnage an eerie, documentary weight, making this among the most haunting visualizations of H.G. Wells' alien invasion ever committed to paper.
Pure nightmare fuel rendered with Victorian precision — Corrêa doesn't just illustrate Wells, he *improves* him. The frantic ink lines and hellish glow make this feel less like illustration and more like a survivor's traumatic flashback etched in acid.





