Yep. Screaming out "Be Bop A Lula" and "You Really Got Me" in adjacent baths not knowing who each other was. Sting played the Ace, the Mod King who was really a bellhop.
The album was a little ahead of it's time when it came out. It was so geared around the Mod/Rocker thing, that a lot of the American audience couldn't really grasp it. When the movie came out several years later the album blew through the roof, with several tunes from the album getting heavy rotation on AOR stations around the country. It gave a Mod Revival started by the Jam in '76/'77 in the UK a huge kick in the pants on both sides of the Atlantic. The Mod scene in the States took some of it's deepest roots in San Diego for some odd reason? A lot of very late 70's "New Wave" had that Mod Power Pop sound, the Romantics and The Knack being prime examples here, with the great Joe Jackson's first couple of albums on the other side along with the Purple Hearts. Joe Jackson, IMO, is a forgotten man who should be played on every radio station, what a friggin' talent!
Check out the soundtrack to the movie if you can find it. Mods loved that Stax and Motown Soul sound. When I first saw an article in the old Trouser Press talking about Northern Soul circa 1980, I thought "What the Hell are they talking about? That stuff was recorded in Alabama." Northern Soul meant Detroit, Philly, NYC and Chicago here. Who knew they were talking about what people liked in Northern England? At least they got Detroit right.