
Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Martian Fighting Machine Over Water, War of the Worlds 1906
At the height of imperial anxieties and fin-de-siècle dread, H.G. Wells's Martian invasion gave visual form to a terrifying reversal — what if humanity were the colonized? Corrêa's brooding charcoal rendering depicts a towering Martian fighting machine hovering over a darkened, storm-swept waterscape, its ringed hood and trailing tentacles descending from churning clouds. The atmospheric, smudged chiaroscuro technique amplifies the alien vessel's menace and otherworldliness, making the machine feel genuinely extraterrestrial rather than mechanical.
The illustration is restrained and atmospheric rather than lurid, but the looming alien war machine over a desolate seascape carries genuine dread. Corrêa's work predates pulp magazines proper but established the visual grammar that pulp illustrators would later amplify to fever pitch.





