
Henrique Alvim Corrêa – Martian Handling-Machine Finds Victim, War of the Worlds 1906
Unlike the more mechanical and distant depictions by contemporaries like Warwick Goble or Garrett Price, Alvim Corrêa's illustration plunges the viewer into suffocating intimacy — a segmented Martian handling-machine looms over a prostrate human victim inside the ruins of a collapsed building, its articulated tentacle-arm descending through a shaft of eerie light. The cramped, debris-strewn interior amplifies the helplessness of humanity, rendered in Corrêa's signature brooding charcoal draftsmanship that gave H.G. Wells's 1906 Belgian edition its uniquely harrowing visual power.
The claustrophobic terror of a mechanical alien predator cornering a helpless human in rubble is viscerally compelling and would freeze any browsing reader mid-reach. Corrêa's dramatic chiaroscuro and the machine's grotesque segmented form elevate this well beyond decorative illustration into genuine dread.
“A Martian handling-machine finds a victim.”





