In Genie, Make a Wish, the most fascinating figure is not the wish-granting sibling at the center of the romance. It's Ejllael, the Angel of Death. Ejllael is selfish, manipulative, and far from anything humans imagine when they picture a heavenly protector.
As the brother of the genie, Ejllael moves behind the scenes, twisting destiny and pulling strings to serve his own motives rather than any higher good. He is the true architect of the chaos, proving that even stories draped in fantasy romance can hide a divine force that is anything but pure.
This unsettling reveal changed how viewers saw the heart of Genie, Make a Wish. The series may begin like a playful supernatural romance, but its core hinges on the presence of an angel who serves himself first. Ejllael is proof that the idea of celestial goodness can be just a mask. Western television has been playing with this concept for years, creating angels who manipulate, plot, and sometimes destroy. These five shows are some of the clearest examples.
1. Supernatural
Yes, the obvious mention. For fifteen seasons, Supernatural took angels off the pedestal and turned them into power players in a celestial war. They were not guardians or gentle guides. They were political operatives with orders to manipulate, coerce, and, when necessary, destroy. The Heaven of Supernatural feels less like a sanctuary and more like a military regime where rank and ambition matter far more than compassion.
Characters such as Zachariah illustrate this perfectly. He uses psychological torture and threats to push Dean Winchester into becoming Michael’s vessel, showing no regard for human autonomy. Angels in Supernatural routinely override free will because they see humanity as pawns in a much larger conflict. Even the archangels Michael, Lucifer, Gabriel, and Raphael fight bitterly among themselves and drag their wars into the human world.
Castiel begins as a dutiful soldier but eventually breaks ranks. His arc from obedience to rebellion reveals how hollow Heaven’s mission can be and how dangerous blind faith in divine authority really is. By making angels fallible and sometimes terrifying, Supernatural redefined what it means to call something heavenly.
What makes Supernatural especially interesting when viewed alongside Genie, Make a Wish is how both shows strip away the illusion of angelic purity. Ejllael is selfish and works behind the scenes to manipulate fate, much like Zachariah and other angels who treat Dean and Sam as tools. Both universes show that the title “angel” does not mean protector. It can mean strategist, conspirator, and destroyer of human agency.
2. Good Omens
Good Omens replaces blind worship with sharp skepticism. The Heaven it shows is rigid, bureaucratic, and willing to destroy Earth just to fulfill prophecy. At the heart of the story is Aziraphale, a mild-mannered angel who slowly realizes that protecting humanity matters more than following orders. His quiet resistance gives the show warmth while also exposing how broken the celestial system is.
The archangel Gabriel embodies the arrogance and dysfunction of that system. His disappearance and memory loss in Season Two create panic among his peers and reveal cracks in Heaven’s control. The organization that should embody divine perfection comes off as politically motivated and dangerously detached from the world it claims to oversee.
By pairing Aziraphale with Crowley, a demon who is often more humane than the angels, Good Omens proves that morality is not owned by Heaven. The beings in charge of paradise can be petty, shortsighted, and destructive. Doing the right thing sometimes means defying them, just as Ejllael in Genie, Make a Wish shows that obedience to a higher order does not guarantee goodness.
Watching Good Omens after Genie, Make a Wish highlights how Ejllael’s betrayal fits a larger pattern of heavenly dysfunction. Aziraphale quietly rebels while higher angels cling to procedure, just as Ejllael abandons compassion for control. Both series suggest that angels can be dangerous when obedience to a broken system matters more than care for the world they claim to serve.
3. Dominion
Based on the film Legion, Dominion imagines a post-apocalyptic Earth where God has vanished and the archangel Gabriel blames humanity for the silence. Instead of comfort, his celestial army brings annihilation. The show builds a striking vision of angels as military conquerors rather than protectors.
Gabriel commands a legion of lower angels to possess and slaughter humans, turning the apocalypse into a war zone. His crusade is not about justice. It's about rage and wounded pride, a personal vendetta dressed up as divine purpose. Humanity becomes collateral damage in an angel’s rebellion against a missing creator.
Within this chaos, not all angels agree. Archangels Michael and Gabriel clash over whether humans deserve to survive, showing that celestial beings can be as fractured and morally ambiguous as any flawed kingdom on Earth. Dominion uses the angry, self-righteous angel as the backbone of its dystopia, echoing how Ejllael’s selfish moves shake the world of Genie, Make a Wish.
The war in Dominion mirrors the chaos Ejllael unleashes in Genie, Make a Wish. Gabriel’s vendetta and the celestial infighting show what happens when angels put pride and anger above purpose. Ejllael is not leading an army, but his selfish interference echoes Gabriel’s rage-driven rebellion and proves that one angel can destabilize an entire story’s moral center.
4. Lucifer
Lucifer begins with the most famous fallen angel deciding to live among mortals, but it does not stop there. Heaven is not portrayed as a flawless sanctuary. It's a family full of rivalries and manipulation. The series explores what happens when divine siblings fight their wars through human lives.
Michael, Lucifer’s twin, is the clearest example. He schemes to ruin Lucifer’s relationships, manipulates events on Earth, and bends divine rules to serve his jealousy. Amenadiel starts as an enforcer trying to drag Lucifer back to his duties but evolves once he sees the harm caused by Heaven’s rigidity.
This fractured portrayal shows angels as complex, often petty beings wrestling with destiny and control. Instead of moral perfection, Lucifer offers ambition, pride, and family drama. It proves that celestial power does not guarantee virtue, a truth that Genie, Make a Wish fans will recognize after watching Ejllael tear apart any simple notion of angelic goodness.
Lucifer and Genie, Make a Wish share the same core warning: divinity does not guarantee kindness (plus, the Devil can know true love). Ejllael’s schemes to manipulate the genie’s fate resemble the way Michael manipulates events to break Lucifer. Both stories explore how sibling rivalry and wounded pride among angels can spiral into manipulation that changes human lives forever.
5. Preacher
Violent, irreverent, and darkly funny, Preacher treats Heaven as a deeply flawed institution. The angels Fiore and DeBlanc are inept bureaucrats trying to clean up a cosmic mess, more worried about saving face than saving lives. Their mission to retrieve the entity Genesis, a fusion of angel and demon power, turns into a disaster fueled by fear and self-interest.
As the story unfolds, the supposed divine order looks increasingly chaotic. God himself is portrayed as manipulative and willing to abandon creation when it no longer amuses him. The angels serve a system built on ego and hypocrisy rather than holiness.
By mocking the idea of an infallible Heaven, Preacher pushes the trope of angels gone wrong to its extreme. It's irreverent but effective, showing that divine authority can be just as corrupt and self-serving as any human empire. Fans of Genie, Make a Wish who loved the chaos brought by Ejllael will find a familiar thrill in watching these flawed messengers fumble their mission.
When Preacher mocks the idea of divine order, it lands close to what Genie, Make a Wish does with Ejllael. Fiore and DeBlanc’s bungling missions and God’s selfish choices show a Heaven that is messy and untrustworthy, just like the hidden system Ejllael serves. Both stories strip away any comfort that the word “angel” might give.
Bonus: Angel Sanctuary (not a Western series, though worthy of mention)
For anime/manga fans who want another story where angels are anything but perfect, Angel Sanctuary is a classic. It follows Setsuna Mudo, the reincarnation of the rebel angel Alexiel, who defied God and was cursed to suffer endless human reincarnations. The celestial order here is brutal and unforgiving, just like the hidden cruelty behind Ejllael in Genie, Make a Wish.
Alexiel’s twin brother Rosiel begins as a loyal angel but becomes obsessive and destructive, embodying how divine love can twist into control and madness. The heavens in Angel Sanctuary are rife with corruption, punishments, and power struggles that make them feel more like a flawed empire than a paradise.
The series dives into identity, rebellion, and the cost of divine failure. It proves that angels can be selfish, dangerous, and deeply human in their flaws. Anyone intrigued by Ejllael’s dark turn in Genie, Make a Wish will find Angel Sanctuary an equally fascinating descent into celestial treachery.
Watching Angel Sanctuary can feel like diving even deeper into the themes that Genie, Make a Wish teases through Ejllael. The corruption of Heaven, the sibling rivalry between Alexiel and Rosiel, and the cruelty of divine punishment echo the way Ejllael twists his role as the Angel of Death. Fans who loved seeing Genie, Make a Wish challenge angelic perfection will find a whole cathedral of betrayal here.

Final thoughts on Genie, Make a Wish and beyond
Genie, Make a Wish shows that an angel can be selfish, calculating and dangerously human in his flaws. Ejllael, the Angel of Death, drives the story not through kindness but through control and hidden motives. Western series have long explored this darker side of the divine, turning angels into soldiers, schemers and rebels.
From the political cruelty of Supernatural to the chaotic bureaucracy of Preacher, every example proves that heaven can fracture and fail. Fans who loved the shocking twist of Ejllael will find a whole lineage of stories that question the comfort of angelic perfection and replace it with ambition, rivalry and risk.