Tallent finished in 1 hour 19 minutes and 42 seconds behind Russian winner Valeriy Borchin, who gave his country its first-ever walking Olympic gold medal as he claimed gold in 1:19:01.
The 22-year-old Russian soldier beat 1996 Olympic champion Jefferson Perez of Ecuador (1:19:15) into second place.
Australian Luke Adams finished sixth.
Tallent was physicallly sick as he crossed the line to claim bronze.
"I was actually spewing up down the front straight," he told Channel Seven.
"I came into the tunnel and the Chinese Wang Hao was catching and I just had to put it in. And soon as I did that it just started to come up. I was struggling to hold it in, as soon as I crossed the line I just had to let it all out."
Borchin - who served a one-year drugs ban in 2005/06 - had been swept up in a confusing story prior to the Games where his coach said that he had failed a drugs test, a story which was denied by the national team coach.
Rustam Kuvatov of Kazakhnstan set the early pace and was narrowly ahead after two kilometres just after the athletes had left the stadium.
Kuvatov's flirtation with Olympic fame came to an end just after the five-kilometre mark as he was caught and passed by Francisco Fernandez of Spain while Ireland's Robert Heffernan took closer order on his shoulder.
A group of 26 were now clear of the rest of the field.
At the eight-kilometre mark Fernandez - silver medallist in Athens and three times a silver medallist in the world championships - was joined up front by defending champion Ivano Brugnetti with Eder Sanchez of Mexico also prominent while Heffernan and Australia's Adams looked dangerous.
At the halfway mark Brugnetti and Fernandez shared the lead with the dogged Heffernan stalking them and Luis Lopez of Coloimbia on his shoulder in a lead group of 12.
Fernandez received a warning shortly afterwards as Heffernan surprisingly took the lead with Brugnetti in second and Fernandez third as the group contending for medals was whittled down to eight.
This trio alternated the lead but suddenly on the horizon appeared the menacing figure of Perez.
Perez, Brugnetti and Fernandez upped the pace and split the leading pack with Heffernan one of those dropped.
However, the Italian and the Spaniard were blown away as Borchin went up a gear and only Perez was capable of staying with him while Tallent moved into bronze medal position.
Though Perez hung on valiantly the Russian landed the killer blow two kilometres from the finish as he accelerated seemingly at will and opened up a decisive gap.
The Ecuadorean - who became the youngest ever winner of the walk in 1996 - could not reel him back in and dropped to his knees and made the sign of the cross on crossing the line as he bowed out after a glorious career.
Tallent by contrast cut a distressed figure as he threw up in the final metres.
-ABC/AFP
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