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Home»Entertainment & Celebrity Buzz»How Arctic Link Brings the Internet, and Digital Change, to Life on an Epic Scale
Entertainment & Celebrity Buzz

How Arctic Link Brings the Internet, and Digital Change, to Life on an Epic Scale

AdminBy AdminMarch 14, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read

Imagine a remote corner of Alaska finally getting connected to the internet, and you can witness it! Interested? If so, are you wondering what this change will mean for the islanders? Filmmaker Ian Purnell has you covered on both fronts with his debut feature Arctic Link, a documentary of epic proportions in more ways than one.

The film world premieres on Monday, March 16 in the main competition program ofCPH:DOX, theCopenhagen International Documentary Film Festival, whose 23rd edition runs through March 22.

Remember how we mentioned that the doc was epic? “In the Arctic Ocean, a colossal ship drifts along, while thousands of kilometers of fiber optic cable slide from the deck into the dark depths of the sea,” reads a synopsis.

If you need more evidence of the project’s scale, let’s just mention that the filmmaker worked on it for about 10 years. The CPH:DOX website even highlights this about Arctic Link: “Everything is enormous – from the massive cables to the images and phenomenal sound design – but the human scale never disappears from view.”

The looming digital change is juxtaposed by the ship’s Filipino crew members drifting in isolation, with their cell phones the only connection to home, if they work.

“When I first discovered a map of the world’s submarine cables, the internet suddenly took on a physical shape,” Purnell shares in a director’s statement. “I felt a strong urge to trace these hidden routes – to see how the network disappears beneath the sea and to meet the people who build these connections. I wanted to understand this infrastructure that usually remains unseen, and I knew I could only approach it emotionally rather than purely technologically.”

Produced by Franziska Sonder, Arctic Link features cinematography by Marie Zahir. The editor is Chris Wright, while sound and music come courtesy of Tobias Koch. Filmotor is handling sales.

‘Arctic Link’ film still

Courtesy of Ian Purnell

Check out a trailer for Arctic Link here, which touches on the question of whether the internet will turn out to be a savior or a beast. It actually kicks off with a stat that may surprise you: 99 percent of internet traffic is going through submarine cables.