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Absolutely, yes--in many stories, the Villain is a mirror of the Hero--or, more accurately, a mirror of the Theme.
For stories written well around a theme (which many stories are, whether or not it's intentional), EVERY single character in the entire story reflects the theme in some way, down to the throwaway characters in the background. So in a well-structured theme-based story, the Villain will reflect the opposite of the theme (antithesis). This is not only for story structure and integrity, but also, as you noted, to further the Hero's journey.
It's not always an overt mirror--sometimes it's a very subtle relation to the theme--but it's there. But if you're stuck, or you feel like your villain isn't quite right, standing back and looking at your villain from the perspective of the theme can help a lot.
A good overt example is the movie WALL-E. If you look at the movie as revolving around the theme of "directive" (protocol, doing what's expected of your "programming"), you can see that Wall-E, Eve, AUTO, and even the gatekeeper bot whose job it is to run the elevator all struggle with following programming to varying degrees. It's a great film to study if you want an easy-to-spot, overt example of consistent theme.
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