
Age: 41
male
Finn Wittrock (born October 28, 1984) is an American actor best known for his role as Damon Miller on three seasons of "All My Children" (ABC/Hulu/OWN, 1970-2013). Having grown up in a theater-obsessed family in Massachusetts and Los Angeles, Wittrock began studying acting on his own after high school, and enrolled in the drama program at New York's prestigious Juilliard School. It wasn't long before he began landing guest spots on shows like "Cold Case" (CBS, 2003-2010), "ER" (NBC, 1994-2009), and "CSI: Miami" (CBS, 2002-2012), all while honing his craft by acting in plays in and around New York and Los Angeles. His big break came in 2009 when he was cast as the young Casanova Damon Miller on "All My Children." Wittrock appeared as the Miller character for three seasons on the show, before returning to the stage in 2012. This time, however, he would be starring alongside Philip Seymour Hoffman in a Mike Leigh-directed revival of "Death of a Salesman." The revival received overwhelmingly positive reviews, with Wittrock receiving much of the praise for his performance as Harold "Happy" Loman. After the play wrapped up in the spring of 2012, Wittrock returned to screen acting, appearing in a recurring role as Dale in the 1950s period drama "Masters of Sex" (Showtime 2013- ), as well as supporting roles in the big-budget epic "Noah" (2014) and "Winter's Tale" (2014). 2014 was also the year Wittrock appeared in the HBO movie "The Normal Heart," as well as an episode of "American Horror Story" (FX, 2011- ), thus allowing him to work with writer/director/producer Ryan Murphy on two separate projects in the same year.

Noa is a young and vulnerable sex worker from South Korea who moves to an apartment complex in Madrid to start afresh. However, he soon discovers that the place has a dark side, with sadistic secrets and forbidden desires lurking within its walls. Despite initially seeming ordinary, the inhabitants reveal their predatory nature, and Noa becomes the object of their depraved obsessions due to his beauty and overt sexuality. He undergoes a series of harrowing experiences, including mutilation and torture, that blur the lines between pain and pleasure. These ordeals shatter Noa's psyche and sense of self as he tries to survive in a world where societal norms are defied. Noa is trapped in a world of perversion and violence and he's struggling to hold onto his humanity. He's haunted by his captors and his own desires, becoming a pawn in their game of dominance and submission. The film takes a dark turn, leaving Noa's survival uncertain. Will he escape and reveal the horrors of the apartment complex, or will he be lost forever to despair?

