If You Miss Loki, You Should Be Watching Criminal Minds: Evolution – No, Really
After all, Loki is part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and the show includes all the magic, timeline-twisting, and talking clock mascots this entails. In contrast, Criminal Minds and its revival, Criminal Minds: Evolution, are both comparatively self-serious crime procedurals. However, Criminal Minds: Evolution’s Elias Voit storyline proves that Loki has a lot in common with the long-running crime thriller series when it comes to the unlikely redemption arcs of their main characters.
Criminal Minds’ Elias Voit Has Gone From A Monster To A Redemption Arc This Season
Zach Gilford’s Character Became An Unlikely Ally
In Loki, Loki’s villainy is revealed to have a tragic backstory as viewers learn that he never had a choice in becoming the antagonist of his story. Locked into his fate by He Who Remains, Loki was always destined to become the villain he was when viewers met him and, once freed, he chose to be a better man. Loki season 2’s ending unexpectedly made him an outright hero, changing the trajectory of the character’s story after he won over audiences.
When viewers first met Voit, the serial killer was a seemingly stable family man who established an entire elaborate network of other serial killers to ensure the FBI never tracked him down.
Like The TVA In Loki, The BAU Is Using Voit’s Knowledge To Capture Other Killers
Gilford’s Complex Character Shares The Same Arc As Loki’s Title Character
Before anyone could mistake Voit for a potentially sympathetic character, Criminal Minds: Evolution revealed the worst of the depraved serial killer’s capabilities. Gilford’s Criminal Minds: Evolution character threatened his own family and terrorized his many victims, the BAU, and even other serial killers throughout season 2. However, in season 3, he suffered from amnesia and had to be reminded of his identity.
A Redemption Arc Like Loki’s Or Voit’s Only Works With The Right Twist
Loki’s and Voit’s Shared Character Arcs Rely On One Major Factor
The worse a character is, the more compelling and believable the catalyst for their redemption arc has to be, and Voit was incredibly depraved in his serial killings. His horrific upbringing and the fact that the part of his brain responsible for empathy didn’t work were both reasonable explanations for his sadism, but they didn’t excuse his actions. Now that he finally has empathy for the first time, he is seemingly choosing to atone and become a better person.
As well as playing Voit, Gilford directed Criminal Minds: Evolution season 2, episode 8, “North Star.”