Did you get a chance to lick J.T. for me?
No, but I kind of brushed past him in the lobby when everyone was leaving! It was very exciting.
The thing about the female characters all being made up while the male characters are based on real people is I'm not sure there would be any women in this movie if Sorkin hadn't written some in, so it's hard to say for certain whether the choice was a net positive or negative. (I mean, I wouldn't trade the line Zuck's girlfriend gives at the end of the opening scene for anything - it's flat-out awesome. But knowing she's pure narrative device while he's a real guy gives the whole thing a weird vibe.)
(I just realized that there are 2 female lawyers in the courtroom scenes who may in fact have been based on real lawyers. But since they're part of the frame and not the main narrative, they don't really count as characters. The purpose of the deposition scenes is to give the main characters a handy excuse to transition in and out of flashbacks, so the lawyers' roles are pretty much limited to asking "So what happened next?" and "Is that the way you remember it?")
Chris Evans on Captain America set.
What's with the hobbit feet?
What's with the hobbit feet?
Probably to protect his actual feet for a barefoot running scene.
He does, however, look almost exactly like Captain America as drawn by Kevin Maguire in the Adventures of Captain America, Sentinel of Liberty limited series.
I didn't realize it was
set in the past.
Is that a spoiler? I'm wondering how they're going to fold him into The Avengers.
Laga, in the comic books, Captain America
was preserved in ice for several decades after the end of WWII, only to be discovered by the Avengers later on.
What really happened was that
after WWII superheroes became unpopular and Captain America's comic book was canceled. After they became popular again in the 1960s they used him being frozen as a way to retcon the character back into existence.