You might consider a Yashica Lynx 14E. They come with a built in light meter and it has a 45mm f:1.4 lens. Viewfinder is kind of hard to read and the light meter is button activated, which can be annoying. But it's a nice camera for the price. It'll be hard to find a faster lens for the money, let alone one attached to a camera body. Also it's large and heavy. But it has a Copal leaf shutter, so it's pretty quiet and won't vibrate the camera when you take a shot.
Personally, I go with one of the Russian rangefinders. They're all really cheap, well built, and have interchangeable lenses, which is nice. Some come with selenium light meters, which may or may not work by now, and if they do work, will almost certain require some compensation. Others don't come with any light meter. I have a Zorki 4 I use with an old Sekonic LC2 hot shoe meter. I have to set my ISO a stop below what the film is to use the light meter, but it works pretty well with that compensation factored in. There are a lot of really nice lenses you can buy for one of those, and most of them aren't ridiculously expensive.
Personally, I go with one of the Russian rangefinders. They're all really cheap, well built, and have interchangeable lenses, which is nice. Some come with selenium light meters, which may or may not work by now, and if they do work, will almost certain require some compensation. Others don't come with any light meter. I have a Zorki 4 I use with an old Sekonic LC2 hot shoe meter. I have to set my ISO a stop below what the film is to use the light meter, but it works pretty well with that compensation factored in. There are a lot of really nice lenses you can buy for one of those, and most of them aren't ridiculously expensive.