Most tungsten or halogen bulbs are 3200 degrees kelvin. If you look at the color spectrum of either of them it's a straight line through the middle of the entire visible spectrum. If you look at one from a CFL or LED it's amazing how different it is. The reason it looks acceptable is that your brain compensates and fills in the gaps. An interesting way to demonstrate it is to sit in a room with lights with red gels on. After about 1/2 an hour it won't be red anymore but more of a grayish non color as your brain tries to correct the red out,, then go outside in daylight and for about 30 seconds the daylight will be bright blue. Then your brain compensates back and it's normal daylight
I remember a student exercise at UCLA where glasses were put on that inverted the image. After wearing the glasses for 2 days his brain flipped the image and it appeared normal. After the glasses were taken off the image was inverted until a nights sleep. When he woke up the image was normal. Really weird.
When you shoot film there's no correction as the film just records the colors that hit it.