
Le Voyage dans la Lune 1902 — Moon Face Rocket Impact Still
Unlike the flat lithographic moon imagery common in Victorian astronomical illustrations or the pen-and-ink celestial scenes of contemporary Jules Verne editions, this iconic frame from Georges Méliès's 1902 silent film captures the anthropomorphic moon at the precise moment a bullet-shaped rocket lodges in its eye — a visceral, surrealist image that fused theatrical spectacle with proto-science-fiction cinema. The moon's grimacing human face, framed by roiling clouds, became arguably the most reproduced sci-fi image of the Edwardian era.
A rocket jammed into the eye of a screaming moon face is one of the most viscerally arresting images in all of early speculative fiction — pure carnival showmanship translated into cinema. It would have stopped anyone dead on a poster or lobby card display.





