Pure nonsense.
Star Trek Into Darkness has an almost completely original story. It's just that the one sequence that
is constructed to closely parallel an earlier sequence -- Spock watching Kirk die from radiation exposure and yelling, "Khan!," paralleling Kirk's scream of Khan's name and Kirk watching Spock die of radiation exposure in
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan -- resonated in people's memories more than the rest of the movie. The actual plot of the movie -- Kirk is ordered to use authoritarian, abusive methods to track down a terrorist, only to discover that that terrorist was manipulated by a conspiracy within his government that wants to provoke a war -- bears no relationship to anything from the earlier films. Really, the closest any of the earlier
Star Trek shows did to
Into Darkness was the DS9 two-parter "Homefront"/"Paradise Lost."
Christopher Nolan's
Dark Knight trilogy (2005-2012) was a successful reboot of the Tim Burton/Joel Schumaker
Batman film series (1989-1997). (And Tim Burton's 1989 film can be seen as a reboot of the Adam West film.)
The new
Deadpool film (2016) is a reboot of the earlier version of Deadpool that appeared in
X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009).
Captain America: The First Avenger (2011) is a reboot of the 1990
Captain America.
Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) is a reboot of the original
Planet of the Apes (1968).
The Incredible Hulk (2008) was a reboot of
Hulk (2003).
Casino Royale (2006) was a reboot of the
James Bond franchise.
The Marvel Television/Netflix series
Daredevil is a reboot of the Ben Affleck film
Daredevil (2003).
My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic (2010-present) is a reboot of
My Little Pony (1984-1987).
And, of course,
Star Trek (2009) was a wildly successful reboot of the
Star Trek franchise, grossing an adjusted North American box office of $284,274,572 -- which is approximately $16 million more than the franchise's previously all-time high of $268,198,020 for
Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979), and approximately $131.9 million more than the previous films' average box office of $152,342,319.70.
Sorry, but plenty of reboots are very popular and successful, and
Star Trek is a prime example of that.
You have no clue what you're talking about.
The one where Trelane introduces the Cybermen?
Not to make you feel any older, but Gus Van Sant's remake of
Psycho was released on 4 December 1998. That's two presidents ago -- two two-term presidents ago. A child born on that day can be a licensed motor vehicle operator and can see R-rated movies without their parents, and they're just a few months away from becoming a legal adult. More than "a few years ago" now.
1) They were
never going to constrain anyone who made new
Star Wars films and it was ridiculous to ever expect them to. No, Lucasfilm is not going to constrain the makers of
Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens because of something in a book published in 2002 that sold maybe a few thousand copies. Anyone who made you think otherwise was full of it.
2) They are not "on the level of fan fiction" because they were still professionally produced and authorized by the intellectual property owners.
You are missing out on a wonderful movie for incredibly silly reasons.
* * *
TL;DR:
As Captain Kirk said in
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country: "Some people are very threatened by change."