
Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Martian Heat-Ray Blast, War of the Worlds 1906
Before you stands one of the most viscerally powerful illustrations from Henrique Alvim Corrêa's landmark 1906 Belgian edition of H.G. Wells' 'The War of the Worlds.' Rendered in masterful charcoal and pencil, this rooftop-level scene captures the terrifying moment a Martian heat-ray detonates across a tiled European roofscape — debris and energy radiating outward in a blinding burst of destruction. The low angle pulls the viewer into the chaos with unnerving immediacy, a hallmark of Corrêa's uniquely cinematic and expressionist approach to Wells' apocalyptic invasion narrative.
Corrêa's work transcends pulp in artistic ambition — the charcoal draftsmanship is genuinely expressive and technically accomplished. Yet the raw kinetic energy of the exploding rooftop, with debris flying in every direction, delivers the visceral spectacle pulp demands at its most dramatic.





