The Wolf Man/Headscratchers

The Original

 * Why did the Wolf Man, a werewolf with fangs and claws, opt to strangle the majority of his victims?

The Remake

 * All evidence points to the werewolves of this universe being incapable of controlling their actions while wolf-ified, and mostly unable to remember what happened the next morning. Despite their heightened senses, there is no evidence that they can distinguish blood relatives, or that such a distinction would hold any value for them while in that state. It takes a huge effort for
 * When I watched the movie I got the very strong impression that the werewolves are perfectly capable of distinguishing targets and controlling their actions. Evidence for this is given when John Talbot becomes a werewolf and kills his wife, but not his son. Later on he does kill one of his sons, quite intentionally. Just about everything we learn about John indicates that he positively delights in the rampant murder and destruction he can anonymously cause via his transformations. His son on the other hand only attacks certain kinds of people; those that he hates (the doctors who torture him in the asylum) and those who get in his way or are actively trying to kill him. At several points in the movie he runs away from people he could very easily have killed, such as the entire police blockade in London. At his worst Talbot’s actions are that of an animal suffering extreme sensory overload, blindly lashing out at everything around him with no understanding. On the other end of the spectrum he displays both curiosity and restraint when he meets Gwen in the woods (on literally every other kill in the movie, neither werewolf has shown any hesitation whatsoever) and even seems to have gained a measure of control over himself just before the hunting party show up. If anything, Talbot’s werewolf side acts like the Hulk if the Hulk were a hairy wolf-thing that only transformed at the full moon. His father is more like the Abomination.