










"Janis Carter is the female lead in two of Columbia’s “Whistler” pictures, The Mark of the Whistler (1944) and The Power of the Whistler (1945), but I couldn’t have picked her out of a lineup of other glamorous B-movie blondes from the ’40s until I saw her as the death-obsessed femme fatale with a heart of ice in Henry Levin’s "Night Editor" (1946).
A scene from "Framed" starring Glenn Ford and Janis Carter, directed by Richard Wallace in 1947

The part Janis Carter plays in Richard Wallace’s "Framed" is more nuanced and less irredeemably evil than the role she played in "Night Editor", but she’s still a nasty piece of work. Soon enough, Paula’s evil schemes become apparent to the viewer, if not to the booze-addled Mike. She’s only working in a greasy spoon to troll for a patsy that she and her boyfriend, Steve Price (Barry Sullivan), need for a scheme they’ve got cooked up. And Mike fits the bill. Framed is a programmer that benefits greatly from having a rising star like Ford in the lead role.



Richard Wallace, the director of Framed, was a hard-working studio hack. His career as a director spanned from 1925 to 1949 (he died in 1951), during which he made 46 features and 15 shorts. Of the films he directed that I’ve seen, Framed is one of the best". Source: ocdviewer.com