War of the Worlds AI Videos

Direct the Wells invasion in your browser with Morphic's War of the Worlds AI video generator. Generate War of the Worlds scenes like the smoking metal cylinder unscrewing on Horsell Common, the first Martian tripod rising taller than a church steeple, or a tripod striding through burning Weybridge with the heat-ray firing forward, and pair them with the Speech and Music tools to layer the philosopher-narrator and a Holst-style invasion score. Stitch the Surrey beats into a literary sci-fi episode.

War of the Worlds figures you can direct

War of the Worlds scenes you can stage

The cylinder unscrews on Horsell Common

On a sandy heath at Horsell Common in midsummer dusk, a smoking metal cylinder unscrews itself with a slow grinding sound while a crowd of Surrey villagers watches from a safe distance behind a low ridge.

Edit prompt
The cylinder unscrews on Horsell Common

The first tripod rises

At dawn over the gorse of Horsell Common, the first Martian tripod rises on three jointed metal legs taller than a church steeple, the brass hood at its apex catching the early sun.

Edit prompt
The first tripod rises

The heat-ray on the common

In late evening light on Horsell Common, the heat-ray sweeps in a near-invisible line across a fleeing crowd of Surrey villagers, gorse and human figures bursting into flame as it passes.

Edit prompt
The heat-ray on the common

A tripod in burning Weybridge

In burning Surrey suburb streets at red dusk, a Martian tripod strides through Weybridge with the heat-ray projector firing forward as Edwardian villas collapse around it and the river runs in flame.

Edit prompt
A tripod in burning Weybridge

Make War of the Worlds videos in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your War of the Worlds scene

    Write the War of the Worlds scene you want, including the moment, location, and camera direction.

  2. 02

    Generate the video

    Morphic generates a cinematic, frame-ready clip on your canvas in seconds, no editing software required.

  3. 03

    Refine your War of the Worlds video

    Tweak the prompt, regenerate variations, then download or share the moment the shot lands.

Related workflows

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FAQs

Where can I make War of the Worlds videos with AI?
You can create War of the Worlds scenes directly in your browser on Morphic. Open the Text to Video tool, describe the moment you want, and Morphic produces the clip. No installs and no specialist software needed.
What kinds of War of the Worlds scenes work best with AI video?
Single-shot moments tend to work best: the cylinder unscrewing on Horsell Common, the first tripod rising at dawn, the heat-ray on the common, a tripod walking through burning Weybridge, the empty Thames bridges, the dead Martian at Primrose Hill. Anchor each War of the Worlds scene to a specific Wells location and a specific light source.
How do I keep War of the Worlds figures consistent across scenes?
Use the Character Lineup workflow to lock the narrator, the artilleryman, the curate, the Martian tripod, and the Martian itself before producing scenes, then reference those character cards in every prompt. Morphic preserves the design across the invasion so a War of the Worlds series feels continuous.
How do I make my War of the Worlds videos feel like Wells, not the Spielberg film?
Anchor your prompts to Wells's actual locations: Horsell Common, Woking, Weybridge, the Thames Valley, Primrose Hill. Reference Henrique Alvim Corrêa's 1906 Belgian-edition illustrations as the visual anchor for the tripod design and the Martian itself. Set the period as late-Victorian or Edwardian, not 21st-century. Avoid likeness language for any film performer.
Can I add narration and music to my War of the Worlds videos?
Yes. The Speech tool generates a first-person-narrator voiceover from your script in the voice you choose, and the Music tool produces an original orchestral or eerie soundtrack. Layer them onto your generated video to publish a complete War of the Worlds episode.
What visual style works best for a War of the Worlds video?
Three styles consistently land. Cinematic photoreal in the spirit of high-budget Victorian sci-fi delivers the prestige Wells look. Painterly oil with chiaroscuro echoes the Henrique Alvim Corrêa illustrations from the 1906 Belgian edition. Black-and-white grainy newsreel in the spirit of the Orson Welles 1938 broadcast can carry the docu-fiction tone. Name the style directly in the prompt.