We've long admired James Bond for what he has that we don't: the cars, the tux, the attitude, the girls. But there's one aspect of the Bond persona that anyone can steal: his drink orders. For some people, half the appeal of ordering a Martini lies in the fact that it's 007's "shaken, not stirred" drink of choice.

But is it still? In the latest Bond installment, Skyfall , which earned $87.8 million in its opening weekend, Bond (now played by Daniel Craig) eschews his signature Martini, opting instead for...a bottled Heineken? Since when did MI6 start doing product placement? What next--will he swap his Savile Row suits for a polo shirt and khakis? But the fact is, this is nothing new: Over the course of 23 movies, almost none of which have been immune to product placement, Bond's drink choices have changed regularly. Check out how they have evolved below.

Sean Connery

A dashing Sean Connery first filled Bond's shoes in 1962's Dr. No, and it was this 007 incarnation who first drank a dry vodka Martini--"shaken, not stirred," says the titular villain. It appeared twice in the film, once with a twist of lime and again with a twist of lemon. And right off the bat, Smirnoff was the official vodka brand of the Bond lifestyle. It wasn't until Goldfinger in 1964, however, that we hear Bond himself say the famous words.

But a dry vodka Martini wasn't the only hooch our favorite superspy drank in Goldfinger ; he was also served a bottle of 1947 Mouton Rothschild (which, according to wine-searcher.com, would run you an average of $4,826 today), which he uses to expose a server posing as an assassin. How? Catching that the server didn't know that Mouton Rothschild is a Bordeaux.

Nor was the Martini Bond's only cocktail in the Connery era. While relaxing on Auric Goldfinger's horse ranch in Kentucky, Goldfinger offers Bond*--what else?--*a mint julep . Connery's Bond also swigged Turkish raki in a gypsy camp outside Istanbul in From Russia with Love (1963) and drank a rum Collins in Thunderball (1965).

George Lazenby

George Lazenby's Bond never strayed from the dry Martini in 1969's On Her Majesty's Secret Service , but he did express a knowledge of and appreciation for beluga caviar. Fancy.

Of all the ex-Bonds, Lazenby has been the most vocal critic of the Heineken Situation, telling TMZ last spring that ditching the Martini is an unwelcome break from tradition, especially since he thinks Heineken is "not the best beer out there, either."

Roger Moore

Again, Roger Moore's Bond incarnation doesn't deviate from the standard "shaken, not stirred" bar order. However, in Live and Let Die (1973), Bond almost tries a Sazerac while following a lead in Harlem, but is captured by the villain, Mr. Big, before sipping New Orleans's signature cocktail. In Moore's last role as Bond, in A View to a Kill , Stolichnaya vodka swoops in and steals the product placement spotlight from Smirnoff.

Timothy Dalton

Bond is a man of taste--and one of those tastes, naturally, is for fine Champagne. In one of Timothy Dalton's two films, Licence to Kill (1989), Bond is seen quaffing a 1975 Bollinger. This particular Champagne has been dubbed the "official" Bond Champagne: it can be seen in ten of the 23 films.

Pierce Brosnan

Brosnan's Bond stuck with the dry vodka Martini until 2002's Die Another Day, when he bellies up to a bar in Cuba with the Bond girl Jinx (Halle Berry) and orders the then little-known mojito , spurring the drink into stardom in the American cocktail scene. And it's in this film that Bond's vodka of choice switches again, from Smirnoff to Finlandia.

Daniel Craig

It's in Casino Royale (2008) where Daniel Craig's Bond orders, in the middle of a high-stakes game of poker in Montenegro, the Vesper, a drink created in Ian Fleming's first Bond novel under the same name: "Three measures of Gordon's, one of vodka, half a measure of Kina Lillet. Shake it very well until it's ice-cold, then add a large thin slice of lemon peel. Got it?" The gentlemen at the table are taken aback by the order at first, but then follow suit and order the same thing.

The newest Bond film, Skyfall, prominently features Craig drinking a Heineken, thanks to a product placement deal that also includes a series of Bond-esque ads (and that reportedly netted the film nearly $45 million ). The break from tradition rankled some fans (and George Lazenby), but Craig defended the change, telling Moviefone that "Bond is a drinker, he always has been, it's part of who he is, rightly or wrongly, you can make your own judgment about it, having a beer is no bad thing, in the movie it just happens to be Heineken."

Craig still quaffs his fair share of Martinis in the film, though, so don't worry. Even if Bond can pull it off, brewskies and black tie will never be a thing.