54
Metascore
8 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 75New York PostKyle SmithNew York PostKyle SmithEssentially amounts to an extended interview with a psycho, fleshed out with background material that, while suitably shocking, is not always illuminating or even frank. The film is curiously shy about calling Varg what he is: a Nazi.
- 70SalonAndrew O'HehirSalonAndrew O'HehirAs crafty and compelling as Aaron Aites and Audrey Ewell's Until the Light Takes Us is, it may go too far in its understandable desire to correct the bias and prejudice of mainstream journalism.
- 60Time OutTime OutPlainspoken music doc relies on firsthand testimony from band members and key observers.
- 60The New York TimesThe New York TimesAbsorbing, low-key documentary.
- 50Village VoiceVillage VoiceOne artist favorably compares the homemade metal scene to state-supported "mediocre cultural activity"--as good a designation as any for Until the Light Takes Us.
- 50The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Stephen ColeThe Globe and Mail (Toronto)Stephen ColeContains fascinating footage – material from the 1980s that looks to be the work of angry, ancient Norse warriors. There is, however, almost no perspective here. Perhaps the filmmakers succumbed to a condition associated with a city east of Oslo – the Stockholm Syndrome.
- 40VarietyVarietyStylistic overreach and neglect of the uninitiated make Until the Light Takes Us a too-specialized examination of Norway's black-metal movement and the aberrant culture surrounding it.
- 38Boston GlobeJoan AndermanBoston GlobeJoan AndermanTalking heads are overused in documentaries, but in this case a dose of perspective, a point of view or two, would have a gone a long way toward turning a pageant of unreliable voices and morbid images into a portrait of the artists and their deadly scene as something more than misunderstood.