The film was controversial in its portrayal of psychologically traumatized veterans of the war. "Twenty percent of our army casualties," the narrator says, "suffered psychoneurotic symptoms: a sense of impending disaster, hopelessness, fear, and isolation." Because of the potentially demoralizing effects that the film might have on post-war recruitment, it was subsequently banned by the Army after its production, although some unofficial copies had been made. Film critic and author
James Agee somehow saw the film in 1946 and wrote in
The Nation: "John Huston's
Let There Be Light, a fine, terrible, valuable non-fiction film about psychoneurotic soldiers, has been forbidden civilian circulation by the War Department. I don't know what is necessary to reverse this disgraceful decision, but if dynamite is required, then dynamite is indicated." He further lauded the film as "intelligent, noble, fiercely moving... " Military police once confiscated a print that Huston was about to show friends at the
Museum of Modern Art, claiming that the film invaded the privacy of the soldiers involved. The soldiers'
releases that Huston had obtained had been lost, and the War Department refused to solicit new ones. The copy of the film that was released was of poor quality, with a garbled sound track that "made it almost impossible to understand the whispers and mumbles of soldiers in some scenes." In 2010, the film was selected for preservation in the United States
National Film Registry by the
Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." The
National Film Preservation Foundation then funded restoration of the print and its soundtrack. The restored version was released in May 2012. The National Archives now sells and rents copies of the film and, as a federal government work, the film is in the
public domain. ==Legacy==