Quentin Tarantino's iCarly

This is another movie by legendary director Quentin Tarantino. The movie stars Emma Stone as Carly Shay, Amanda Seyfried as Sam Puckett, Kit Harrington as Freddie Benson, Keanu Reeves as Spencer Shay, Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Gibby Gibson, Robert Downey Jr. as Lewbert Sline, Lucas Till as Nevel Papperman, Samuel L. Jackson as T-Bo, Anne Hathaway as Tasha, Uma Thurman as Lauren Ackerman, Jamie Chung as Kyoko, Ludi Lin as Yuki, Wade Collins, Ricky Flame, Nora Dershlit, Sydney van Gurben, Mr. Howard, Ms. Briggs, Chuck, Principal Franklin, and Ms. Benson.

Plot
Carly Shay moves back to Seattle years after visiting her dad in Italy. She is met by Freddie Benson at the airport who welcomes her back to Seattle. The two go to Freddie's apartment where they find out their old friend, Sam, is waiting.

Cast
Emma Stone as Carly Shay

Amanda Seyfried as Sam Puckett

Kit Harrington as Freddie Benson

Keanu Reeves as Spencer Shay

Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Gibby Gibson

Robert Downey Jr. as Lewbert Sline

Lucas Till as Nevel Papperman

Samuel L. Jackson as T-Bo (Because you can't have a Tarantino movie without Samuel L. Jackson; just watch Once Upon a Time In Hollywood and Inglorious B*stards)

Anne Hathaway as Tasha

Uma Thurman as Lauren Ackerman

Jamie Chung as Kyoko

Ludi Lin as Yuki

Laura Dern as Pam Puckett

Jimmy Fallon as himself

Production
Quentin Tarantino was approached by Paramount Pictures to write, direct, and produce an R-Rated iCarly movie for them. Paramount decided to recast all the iCarly characters because f*ck it, why not. So, Tarantino wrote, directed, and produced an R-rated iCarly movie for Paramount and put a lot of feet scenes in them (because can you imagine a Tarantino movie without feet).

Casting
Samuel L. Jackson was offered the role of T-Bo, which he took. Brad Pitt, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Kurt Russell were all offered roles in the movie, but ultimately declined. Margot Robbie also declined to play Sam in the movie.

Filming
A majority of the movie was filmed in Seattle, Washington (because that's where Carly is from). The cameraman got a bunch of shots of the female characters' feet like Tarantino would want.

Release
It was released...someday.

Reception
Everybody f*ckin loved this masterpiece. It made a sh*t ton of money and won a sh*t ton of awards. The movie was such a success that Paramount hired Quentin Tarantino to write, direct, and produce a Victorious movie for them.