[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for the Criminal Minds: Evolution Season 18 finale “The Disciple.”] Voit’s (Zach Gilford) network is off the board, thanks to the former psychopath himself on Criminal Minds: Evolution.
You can’t keep a good (possibly changed) serial killer down apparently. Zach Gilford will be back for Criminal Minds: Evolution Season 19. Gilford joined the drama when it returned for the revival on Paramount+ after running 15 seasons on CBS.
[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Criminal Minds: Evolution Season 18 Episode 5 “The Brutal Man.”] Has Voit really changed? That’s the question right now on Criminal Minds: Evolution, and who better to ask than the star who plays the serial killer whose brain scan now says he’s no longer a psychopath, Zach Gilford?
[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for the Criminal Minds: Evolution Season 18 premiere “Swimmer’s Calculus.”] Oh, Elias Voit (Zach Gilford). The serial killer known as Sicarius remains at the center of so many of the questions of Criminal Minds: Evolution, which premiered its 18th season on Thursday, May 8, on Paramount+.
Most people have experienced grief at one point or another in their lives, whether it’s the death of a loved one or some other form of loss. Given the power of television as a medium, it makes sense that it would address the issue of grief in myriad ways.
Right now, we’re seeing Zach Gilford play serial killer Elias Voit on Criminal Minds: Evolution. But over Friday Night Lights‘ five-season run (2006-2011), he was the sweet Matt Saracen, a member of the Dillon Panthers.
Penelope Garcia (Kirsten Vangsness) and Luke Alvez’s (Adam Rodriguez) date may not have worked out, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that Criminal Minds: Evolution is done with the possibility of a romance there.
[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Criminal Minds: Evolution Season 17 Episode 4 “Kingdom of the Blind.”] The BAU has the best lead it’s gotten yet on Gold Star after the latest Criminal Minds: Evolution episode.
Directed by Adam Salky and written by David Brind, this niche coming-of-age flick emerged sideways out of a viral short film and follows three teens navigating a confused connection through non-monogamy.