I have opined in the past that "reciprocity" is as much a philosophical construct as a scientific one. The structure of our eyes is such that we do not have color vision in low light (A fact immortalized by the Moody Blues). Since you are taking a photograph of something that you cannot see, how can you judge whether the film has "properly" rendered it?
I have taken a number of nighttime shots with my OM's which use Off The Film metering to determine automatic exposures in low light. The OM-4 goes up to a four minute exposure. These are invariably with slide film, so there is not a whole lot of room for error. In every case the shots come out beautifully. Are they rendered "correctly"? That question really doesn't have any meaning as what my eyes saw and what the photograph records are fundamentally different. Since the film type is not a variable with the OM's, there is no concept of reciprocity with these exposures. Yet the OTF exposure process (along with Olympus' multi-spot metering) was widely recognized as the most sophisticated metering method of any film camera.