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NZ Herald
01-08-2025
- Entertainment
- NZ Herald
Kaikohe Blood & Fire: How kickboxing transformed the lives of troubled men
Kaikohe Blood & Fire documentary director Simon Ogsten spent hundreds of hours filming the kickboxers in Team Alpha at The Mill gym in Kaikohe. Photo / Temepara Hita Ogston shoots down and dirty with the fighters on the mat, inside the ring, in sweaty changing rooms and at ankle-level, where every kick makes the viewer wince. Voiceovers from the fighters answer questions we want to ask: how do you handle the deafening din when thousands of people watch you take a beating? And why do you volunteer to let someone beat you to a pulp in the first place? Three of the most interesting Team Alpha characters, each of whom is at a different stage of his life, give different answers to these questions. Team Alpha's leader and most decorated fighter, Dhcamad Armstrong (pronounced Dee-Car-Mad), is a charismatic Mormon funeral director who wears a suit most days, before donning shin pads and gloves. He says, 'I like to be covered in blood, no matter whose it is.' He's the youngest of seven brothers, and his name is an acronym standing for his brothers' names. Kaikohe kickboxer Dhcamad Armstrong is a Mormon funeral director by day. Photo / Simon Ogston A rising fighter in New Zealand's professional kickboxing ranks, Armstrong, 37, brings intense discipline and relentless optimism to the scruffy young men who walk through the door for the first time, hoping to get away from the temptations, crime, poverty and trauma outside. We join Armstrong and his boys in garages, kitchens, arenas, in the back seats of cars when his fighters are fretting on the way to a fight. Former Rebels bikie and doorman Dave Faulkner, 52, is the second hero of the film. In a slice of typical Northland life, Faulkner is introduced rounding up a stray 'Staffy' (Staffordshire bull terrier) and walking barefoot past a bent, rusty letterbox outside his parents' weatherboard bungalow. Faulkner is rebuilding his life, working at a kiwifruit factory and living in a sleepout with a mountain of golden trophies in the corner. He says his new reality is 'pretty humbling' compared with his old lifestyle of 'easy money'. But he feels proud just using his Team Alpha coffee mug every day. 'Since this mug's come in, I haven't looked back. Team Alpha all the way.' Kaikohe kickboxer Dave Faulkner (right), with fellow kickboxer Dhcamad Armstrong, has turned his life around since walking through the door of The Mill gym. Photo / Simon Ogston Across the film's 85 minutes, Faulkner shows us how much his new Team Alpha colours mean to him as he distances himself from his former gang life. 'I've gone from being a number for the system to inspiring 11-year-olds,' he says. 'I'm inspiring these young fellas in here to be better than me. Through martial arts, you can better your life.' Ogston's film chronicles Faulkner becoming a mentor to youth who join to escape the temptations outside the gym, including Paora Tau, who begins the film as a schoolboy with no male role models but is soon on his way to becoming an experienced fighter, beginning by boxing 11 rounds to celebrate his 11th birthday in front of 20 big men, all standing around in support. 'It's not just boxing, it's bonding,' Tau tells us. Whānau are everything in Kaikohe Blood & Fire. One of the most fascinating characters is Jonti Wright, a physically large but retiring 29-year-old who grew up in a remote valley, dreamed of becoming a fighter, but ended up bullied, abused, depressed and anxious. That is, until he steps through the gym's doors and Armstrong takes him under his wing. Kickboxer Jonti Wright (left) sparring with Dhcamad Armstrong, watched on by Dave Faulkner, at The Mill gym in Kaikohe. Photo / Michael Botur Wright undergoes an emotional journey that took Ogston 800 hours to shoot across three years. Those 800 hours contain many nuggets of gold, including when Wright tearfully phones his mum, Ngaire, after a comeback fight with a surprising result. 'I said to Dhcamad when I came in, 'I'm sick of surviving',' Wright told the Herald. 'I said, 'I want to be alive'. Coming here's been life-changing.' It's been life-changing for Ogston, too, who took on the project after visiting the gym to briefly film a friend who was training there. 'I was struck by Dhcamad Armstrong, what a charismatic and effective leader he was. It's not often you find someone who combines the qualities Dhcamad does. He's a great leader, a great family man and also devastating in the ring. 'I also got to know the rest of the team better and I knew I had something special, and that's what kept me coming back.' The documentary takes viewers inside the life in Kaikohe for many – gumboots, chickens, baked beans on toast, karakia, Māoritanga, facial tattoos, gang colours, weeds, dairies, hoodies, and state housing old and new. That's mixed in with plenty of heart-melting tenderness and plenty of sweatsuits, broken noses and ripped toenails. Dhcamed Armstrong with the documentary's director Simon Ogsten and Dave Faulkner. Photo / Temepara Hita After funding to film a TV series didn't come through, Ogston changed to 'Plan B' and instead made a feature-length documentary. Kaikohe Blood & Fire, Ogston's sixth film to be shown at NZIIF, is named after a Salvation Army 'blood and fire' motto he spotted at a funeral service. He thought of Team Alpha's kaupapa of clean living and rebirth. The question of Kaikohe Blood & Fire is this: can Armstrong's example of clean living, discipline, Christian faith and relentless optimism defeat Hell's Angels gang member Antz Nansen at the end of the film – and will a win in the ring mean a win for troubled Kaikohe? Then again, as the film shows, the effort often matters more than the outcome. 'Not everyone that comes here has to fight, the fighting is the cherry on top,' Faulkner told the Herald. 'People that come get the positiveness. Team Alpha isn't just a fight team, it's a family.' Sign up to The Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
01-08-2025
- Entertainment
- RNZ News
Packing a punch: 'Kaikohe Blood and Fire'
Director Simon Ogston joins Jesse to talk about his film 'Kaikohe Blood & Fire'. On the surface it looks like a film about fighting and mixed martial arts but look a little deeper and it's actually about characters, community and personal growth. Dhcamad Armstrong & David Faulkner Photo: Temepara Hita

RNZ News
13-05-2025
- Sport
- RNZ News
Hundreds gather in Kaikohe to welcome home mixed-martial arts champ
Homegrown heroes Dhcamad Armstrong with former world boxing champion Daniella Smith, both Kaikohe-born and bred. Photo: RNZ/Peter de Graaf Hundreds of people have gathered in Kaikohe to welcome home local hero Dhcamad Armstrong after his latest international mixed-martial-arts title win. Tuesday's welcome was an acknowledgement of Armstrong's achievements, both in the fighting ring and in his hometown, where he uses martial arts to help young men back onto the straight and narrow. Former world boxing champion Daniella Smith, who helped organise the event, said it also aimed to boost pride in a town that punched well above its weight when it came to producing champions. "It's beautiful to see our town come together, it's beautiful to see our tamariki and our rangatahi here, to see that they too can achieve something great, just like Dhcamad," Smith said. "There's a lot of negative publicity about our town, but there's a lot of beautiful gems and a lot of really successful things that are occurring here. We wanted people to come and acknowledge that Kaikohe's more than a town with negative press. So that's what this was about, town pride." Dhcamad Armstrong is welcomed to Papa Hawaiki sports centre with his wife Izumi and children Yamato and Momoka. Photo: RNZ/Peter de Graaf As many as 200 schoolchildren attended the welcome at the town's newly built Papa Hawaiki sports centre, which included waiata, passionate speeches, and rousing haka. Four schools from Kaikohe took part as well as Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Pukemiro all the way from Kaitāia. Armstrong, who was fighting back tears during some of the speeches, said the welcome was an emotional experience. "I actually didn't know how big it would be but walking into this complex I got quite emotional just to see the support from my town. It was massive." Dhcamad Armstrong performs a pukana with a few of his whānau. Photo: RNZ/Peter de Graaf Armstrong said a lot of pride was on display during the event. "There's always pride in this town, but unless you come here and see what's going on, you won't know. What you'd know is what you see in the media, which is not always good things - but there's a lot of good that happens in Kaikohe." Community leader and reformed gang member Jay Hepi said Armstrong's contribution to the town was huge. "He does a lot of work with ex-gang members and ex-addicts, training at the gym, making transformational changes, and getting them on the right pathway. He contributes a lot. He's a positive person." Kaiwero Manga Puhi presents Dhcamad Armstrong with a gift of a taiaha. Photo: RNZ/Peter de Graaf Armstrong said his Team Alpha used fitness and martial arts as vehicles to promote positivity. The team accepted anybody - all they had to do was meet the standards of "everything positive, nothing negative". That included the language they used and the way they conducted themselves, he said. Dhcamad Armstrong signs the hand of 10-year-old Skylah Rapihana from Kaitāia. Photo: RNZ/Peter de Graaf Armstrong, 37, the youngest of eight siblings born and raised in Kaikohe, has many national and international titles in MMA and Muay Thai. His most recent win, and one of his biggest, was an Australasian heavyweight MMA title fight against Antz Nansen at Auckland's Trust Arena earlier this month. Kaikohe's many sporting champions include two-times World Rugby Player of the Year Portia Woodman, world welterweight boxing champion Daniella Smith, and world unicycling champion Chris Huriwai. An emotional Dhcamad Armstrong (Ngāpuhi) speaks during the welcome. Photo: RNZ/Peter de Graaf Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.