Yes, if your LCD/plasma was a 720p screen. The internal circuitry will de-interlace, and convert to 720p for display, since the LCD/plasma itself is progressive. This is the case for TV/broadcast digital interlaced content.
For 1080/24p film content broadcast at 1080i/60, it's actually not too hard to reconstruct the signal to get back 1080p/24, if it was converted properly to 1080i/60 in the first place. This is because when you turn 24p film into 1080i/60, no frames are lost in the process, in fact, some fields of some frames are used more than once to get 24 up to 60, and so to reverse the process, you simply have to remove the duplicate fields and recombine the top/bottom fields of the same frame.
For 1080/24p film content broadcast at 1080i/60, it's actually not too hard to reconstruct the signal to get back 1080p/24, if it was converted properly to 1080i/60 in the first place. This is because when you turn 24p film into 1080i/60, no frames are lost in the process, in fact, some fields of some frames are used more than once to get 24 up to 60, and so to reverse the process, you simply have to remove the duplicate fields and recombine the top/bottom fields of the same frame.
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