This is a word of warning mainly. It's not a bad film, competently made, but I found it very grim and depressing. The kind of story where no-one wins anything and everyone loses big. OK, it gives an insight into life in Iraq, in particular the university entrance system. But if relentless negativity with no shred of hope is going to bother you, I'd give this a miss.
Rojin, whose miserable life has already driven her to a suicide attempt, is desperate to get into university, not for any stated positive reason and there's no sign of any enthusiasm for her studies (or indeed of the studies themselves) but only because it will allow her to avoid an arranged marriage with a man she dislikes. Her approach to this, or rather that of her concerned sister, is not for her to work hard (for some reason this never gets considered as an option) but to cheat - apparently lots of candidates do this. Neither Rojin nor any other character is given much depth - she looks miserable throughout, cries a lot and nothing she ever does drives the action in any way. Fair enough in the circumstances but none of this makes it easy to sympathise with these two sisters.
Then again it's impossible not to sympathise with women doing anything they can to manipulate the vile patriarchy which pervades Islamic and similar socially primitive societies. Such women have no rights nor protection by the law, depending entirely on their fathers and husbands. In turn many of these fathers and husbands (like Rojin's father and brother-in-law) are selfish and arrogant, regarding women as their property and caring nothing for their wishes or happiness. If you already know about this, I can't see much reason to watch. If you don't, you will learn something - nothing shown here is even unusual for the desperate women in these ghastly places.