In parallel with his early TV career, Lee briefly moonlighted in adult films. He moved into mainstream fiction in 1983 with the support of
Citytv boss
Moses Znaimer, who pitched in some money for his first television film,
Copper Mountain, best known for boasting an early
Jim Carrey leading role. This inconsequential effort paved the way for a career as one of Canada's main purveyors of low budget genre films. Perhaps the best regarded of these are a trilogy of underground boxing films, the second of which he directed, and which garnered a modicum of respect in some critical circles. Rose & Ruby also produced two horror features outsourced from the U.S. in collaboration with
Roger Corman and
Carolco. In the first half of the 1990s, Lee also entered a brief partnership with Menahem Golan's financially shaky
21st Century Film Corporation. Around 1993, he abandoned the Rose & Ruby imprint to focus on a newer entity called Richmond House, aligning himself with U.S.-based Indian producer
Ashok Amritraj's Amritraj Entertainment. Among Lee's productions with Amritraj was a series of vehicles for Canadian martial artist/actor
Jeff Wincott which, while severely criticized for their lack of polish, earned some notice for tackling real world issues that foreshadowed the director's more recent efforts. In 1996, Lee merged Richmond House with Canadian distributor United Multimedia to form the publicly traded Noble House Communications. He made just one film and in 1997 left the company, which proved underfunded and soon fell into limbo. In 1997, Lee founded another company called Stone Canyon to promote a batch of higher budgeted films for such stars as
Dolph Lundgren and
Steven Seagal. At Annex, Lee maintained his association with Amritraj and his partner
Andrew Stevens, providing production services for the pair's
Phoenician Entertainment label. However, that relationship was damaged when Lee lobbied to direct 2000's
Agent Red, and delivered a cut that was deemed unreleasable, requiring substantial reshoots. Lee seemingly rebounded when New Cinema Partners, a Nevada-based corporation with Canadian ties, announced its acquisition of Stone Canyon in 2000. He was named president of NCP but was unsuccessful in raising funding for the embattled company, and departed within the next year. Further attempts to align with Ami Artzi's Milestone Media Group did not pan out either. Following a multiyear release hiatus, Lee resurfaced for good around 2005 with a new version of his old company Noble House, now called
Noble House Entertainment, operated with Lowell Conn and Canadian industry veteran Julian Grant. Lee professed his willingness to stick to more prestigious and artistically oriented projects from then on. He also formed a partnership with Paul Wynn, his former backer at Annex, and controversial American producer
Julius Nasso, overseeing the construction of Nasso's
Staten Island film studio while the latter was serving time for his extortion attempt on
Steven Seagal. A trio of early 2010s pictures were produced by longtime Canadian acquaintances Gary Howsam and Bill Marks, the latter of which had worked for him in the 1990s. ==Personal life==