Aggressive. Adversarial. Lol.
I'm not sure you wanna be comparing yourself to the Talosians.
Some of the things you mention are reboots, some are remakes, some are soft reboots of series that already regularly soft reboot
The distinction between a reboot and a remake is fuzzy at best; I can't help but think you are drawing arbitrary lines.
As Trelane never introduced an enemy from Doctor Who to captain Kirk, it's safe to say that Q-who is not a reboot or remake or borrowed concept from the original series, no matter the providence of the borg concept.
You have spectacularly missed the point of my remark there -- which was that "Q Who?" was just as derivative of earlier works as "The Naked Now." And "Q Who?" did not have the excuse of being only the very second episode.
In terms of the Star Wars novels, I never expected them to be accepted as 'canon' by the new movies, regardless of the old Lucas approach, I also did not expect them to be raided while the grave earth was still loose
You know, I don't know where
the idea of Han and Leia's son falling to the Dark Side
and I do not appear to be missing out on much.
You're missing out on an excellent movie.
Into Darkness was an interesting film right up until Nimoy showed up (God rest his soul) but after that it does what I describe, depending on a another source entirely for its emotional weight and a large chunk of dialogue.
Not particularly. The threat posed by Khan was made pretty clear when he single-handedly beat up a squadron of Klingons. Nimoy is there to ratchet up the tension just a bit more. Most of the dramatic weight of the final act comes from thinly-veiled visual allusions to the 9/11 attacks. Again, there is only one scene that can reasonably said to derive from an earlier film; it has merely eclipsed the rest of the film in people's memories.
Which is a shame, because for a moment there, I thought it was going to live up to its promise. There is a character on screen basically saying 'yeah, it's a whole new universe and everything will unfold differently....except him. No matter what has changed he's going to be a villain.
Well of course Khan will be a villain no matter what timeline he's in. He's TOS's version of Lex Luthor or the Joker.
As for the other reboots/remakes, some I am not familiar with, Deadpool wasn't even out when I posted,
It was coming out and the writing was on the wall that it would be a success.
and X Men films did a fairly decent film lately where they changed the timeline, not to mention it's one character who was a part of an earlier film. I don't think it's a reboot any more than the changes to different versions of the White Queen or Cyclops are in those films. Besides which....they are adaptations once again.
More arbitrary distinctions.