Tensile cracks play a pivotal role in the formation and evolution of reservoir landslides. To investigate how tensile cracks affect the deformation and failure mechanism of reservoir landslides, a novel artificial tension cracking device based on magnetic suction was designed to establish a physical model of landslides and record the process of landslide deformation and damage by multifield monitoring. Two scenarios were analyzed: crack closure and crack development. The results indicate that under crack closure, secondary cracks still form, leading to retrogressive damage. In contrast, under crack development conditions, the failure mode changes to composite failure with overall displacement. The release of tensile stresses and compression of the rear soil are the main driving forces for this movement. Hydraulic erosion also plays a secondary role in changing landslide morphology. The results of multifield monitoring reveal the effects of tensile cracking on reservoir landslides from multiple perspectives and provide new insights into the mechanism of landslide tensile-shear coupled damage.