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“If I don’t win, Germans in particular will try to crucify me.”

Until two months ago he was in prison, now a film about Boris Becker is showing at the Berlinale. The questions at the press conference were not only friendly.

Boris Becker, former tennis pro and protagonist, stands at the photo shoot for the film

Boris Becker, former tennis pro and protagonist, stands at the photo shoot for the film “Boom! Boom! The World vs. Boris Becker” as part of the Berlinale in front of the photo wall.Soren Stache/dpa

Shortly before the end of the press conference for the film “Boom! Boom! The World vs. Boris Becker” a Swedish journalist asks a question that is actually cheeky: Can Becker tell you again briefly what exactly brought him to prison. That wasn’t explained very well in the film. On the podium, director Alex Gibney is silently outraged, and the hostess resolves the situation by saying that this question might be better answered in a one-on-one interview.

The fact that this question was even possible shows that the documentation about the life of Germany’s biggest tennis star has sensitive gaps. The scandals of his life, the extramarital adventures on front pages and also the financial scandals – they are touched upon at best. First and foremost, the film is about the rise of an athlete.

For “Boom! Boom! The World vs. Boris Becker” has interviewed director Gibney Becker twice. Once just before the pandemic in 2019 and then in 2022, two days before his sentencing. Becker was sentenced to two and a half years in prison in London at the end of April 2022 because he had concealed assets worth millions from his insolvency administrators. He was released in mid-December after 231 days behind bars because of a special regulation for foreign prisoners. The film begins with a scene from this interview in which he is also crying.

Becker says he didn’t know at the time what the rest of his life would be like. “But I’m glad that I was able to get out safely after eight months and I’m grateful that I can start my new life with my family.” Especially in Germany, he says, “that’s often not allowed, because people don’t want to see that a person can change”. But he has changed and is now more modest. “Things went wrong for me and I paid a price for it.”