https://variety.com/2022/film/news/why-movies-so-dark-hard-to-see-batman-1235195535
This is mostly a good article; but, I need to open by attacking one paragraph.
No, lighting equipment isn't calibrated for white people. CRI is an objective measure of the color science of a light source. All that matters is how the cinematographer uses the technology. Dark skin is harder to light because of physics, not racism.
Otherwise, it's a pretty good overview with a few caveats.
Absolutely turn off the motion smoothing on your televisions and make your settings as neutral as possible.
I also agree with a statement made that movies actually haven't gotten darker in either content or photography. One of my biggest problems with the Marvel movies is that they're all lit like an episode of Saved by the Bell.
What's more is that people - cinematographers particularly - need to understand that there's movie dark and there's dark dark. Dark dark is just dark, lacking detail, hard to see what you're supposed to see. Movie dark is generally referring to high contrast images. I've had people call my cinematography "dark" from time to time and my key lights are almost always a stop over exposed - I just often let the fill side go nearly black.