http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expelled_from_Paradise
I watched this science fiction movie recently because it's script was written by Urobuchi (yes, that was the only reason), but it's very different from his other work (though that perhaps means that he did not have that much control over the scrip). One interesting thing this film has is that it depicts the Earth after the "Nano Hazard" (whose details are not explailed but apparently most of Earth was left in ruins and I guess it was kind of a self replicating nanomatter that devoured most of the world (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey_goo)), anyway as of the time depicted in the film 98% of the world's population has been living as digital minds in a virtual reality in a space station DEVA. Interestingly it is I think the first film I have watched to explicitly talk about such a society where humans have left their physical bodies completely behind. They are still born as babies then their minds are supposedly "digitized" at the age of 60 days. The film did not depict that process explicitly though.

Interestingly, it never addresses some questions regarding the continuity of consciousness when your mind is copied from one container to another. It's similar to the paradox of the transporter as digitizing your mind is equivalent to making a copy of it, right? Though the digital copies would feel like their minds as a continuous from their flesh state to their digital state, so I guess it's okay for them, they can be understood as digital minds that are made from physical blueprints which are later discarded.

Also like anime in general it shows some of the obssession with mecha as 1/3 of the movie is mecha action scenes. Mecha look cool in a way since they are literal humanoid representations of military technology.