HMS
Thunder Child is commonly omitted from some adaptations or replaced outright with technology more appropriate to the updated settings. In
Orson Welles's famous
1938 radio adaptation of The War of the Worlds, a Boeing
B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bomber replaces
Thunder Child; it collides with a fighting-machine after being critically damaged by its Heat-Ray. In the
George Pal 1953 film adaptation, the last-ditch defense against the Martians is an
atomic bomb dropped by a
Thunder Child replacement, a
Northrop YB-49 Flying Wing jet bomber; the atomic bomb proves useless, because the Martian fighting-machines are protected by individual force fields. The first adaptation to feature HMS
Thunder Child was ''
Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds'', which was released in 1978 and retains the novel's Victorian setting, characters, and situations. The album features the song, "Thunder Child". The album's cover art depicts a
Canopus-class battleship fighting a Martian tripod.
The War of the Worlds was written as an account of fictional events early in the 20th century (possibly the summer of 1901) and the lead ship of the class,
HMS Canopus, entered service in 1899 and thus fits the timeline. The 1999 video game adaptation of Jeff Wayne's musical features a level revolving around
Thunder Child. The player is placed in control of the ironclad and must sail it down a river while using its cannons to destroy Martian machines and settlements; the level ends in a climactic confrontation with Tempest, a powerful Martian war machine. In
Steven Spielberg's 2005 film adaptation,
War of the Worlds, contemporary American military forces use tanks and attack helicopters against the alien Tripods, again without success. Earlier in the film, civilian ferries trying to escape from the Tripods are trapped and easily sunk, with no intervention by a warship. The low-budget
direct-to-DVD Pendragon feature adaptation of the novel, released in 2005, uses poor CGI to portray HMS
Thunder Child as a Royal Navy . In the
BBC's 2019 TV miniseries, the main characters join up again on the Essex coast, where many small boats are gathering civilians to ferry them out to anchored ships. A Martian Tripod appears and several warships open fire on it with their main batteries. Most of the warships are at quite a distance offshore, but one, which could be
Thunder Child, is much closer. The Tripod is hit on one its the legs and in its command
cupola, and immediately collapses. A second Martian machine appears on the beach, chasing the protagonists. Before it can activate its Heat-Ray, it is struck by naval artillery shells. It falls forward, narrowly missing crushing the protagonists. As in H.G. Wells’ original novel, the refugees manage to escape, while none of the warships are shown being destroyed by the Tripods. The 2013 science fiction novel
The Last Days of Thunder Child, written by C. A. Powell, is set in Victorian Britain of 1898. ==See also==