I'm quite surprised this flick bypassed cinemas and started by streaming. The big-budget spectacle of Spectral seems intended for more than a laptop; but then I remember I'm archaic and most folks watch Netflix on ultra-high-def smart devices larger than my bed.
After a creepy opening scene in which a soldier in a crumbling building is killed by an invisible figure -- invisible but shimmering in a ghostly mist -- we are introduced to Dr. Clyne (James Badge Dale), a DARPA scientist summoned to Moldova and clearly the protagonist here. As it was his special goggles that helped soldiers "see" the otherwise invisible killers, he is brought in to help modify, clarify, identify, and hopefully pacify as a result. Though the assailants are thought to be insurgent enemy soldiers wearing advanced camouflage, the real horror is that they kill almost instantly and with no apparent weapons.
Then we enter the post-intrigue phase of the film, wherein a lot of new characters are quickly introduced with slipshod exposition. Few matter much, beyond Bruce Greenwood as the U.S. general and Emily Mortimer as the CIA operative running operations in Kishinev, the capital of Moldova. The others, we expect, will die soon enough; this may not be a horror movie, but it runs in that vein of sci-fi action in which bodies will surely pile up. After lots of technical dialogue that I couldn't/didn't want to follow, the team travels into the field with Clyne atop a tank with tools to help him see the unseen enemy. And things start to get interesting.
I don't want to bore with too many details, and a joy in the film is to learn the developments along with the characters. This is probably largely because the characters themselves have no personality, no drama, and no complications. The closest we get, during the dull middle of the film, are a couple conversations between Clyne and others about the ethics of scientific advancements and the moral implications that follow. It's not deep, but it rings true once we learn exactly what the enemies are. Then again, I'm still not sure I entirely understand what they are, apart from what I gathered from the visual dynamics during a notably freaky climax.
But the visuals of this movie are what made it worth a watch from me. There is some downright gorgeous CGI that highlights the gritty urbanity of the setting, and it helps that the cold color palette brings a helpful chill to a movie that questions the cost of war and the ghostly consequences of violent human commodification. While the film can't decide if it wants to be more philosophical or action-heavy, and thus it suffers, its final battle does not shy away from the full-blown chaotic conflict we see often on the big screen. This is when I was most wowed by the spectacle, even as I wasn't sure that the film had earned it.
The more I write, the more I become convinced this film was meant for a streaming services. Gorgeous visuals aside, the plot and characters are too thin and cliche to have found a lucrative market in cinemas. Really, this movie could have easily been reworked into an episode or two of an Arrowverse show. I don't mean that as a dig at all; I'd be totally down to see Team Flash fighting a bunch of ghostly white soldiers.