NO. King Ghidorah and Mothra have been overdone. Angilas, please, perhaps with a side order of Rodan or Varan. Even better, a movie where Godzilla stands alone as an avenging force of destruction against mankind, like in Gojira or Godzilla 1985. He was pretty badass in GMK, too.
I'm going to see it again tonight at 10:30. Maybe a second viewing will help.
^^^
Not for this old Godzilla fan they haven't. I'd LOVE to see a Godzilla and King Ghidorah battle given the same level of visual effects treatment they gave this one. Hell, they could go back to the ORIGINAL Japanese origin of King Ghidorah being from Mars (he was the reason Mars was in the state is is today according to his first appearance

.) -- Makes just as much sense as 'ancient monsters that survived from a time when the Earth was more radioactive and they survived by diving DEEP into the oceans and feeding off radiation coming from being closer to the Earth's core.
As for this film - I liked it way more then the godawful 1998 Mathew Broderick version. I too thought Godzilla could have done with more screen time; but the screentime he did have was executed spectacularly.
As for the plot, in the end this WAS a Godzilla film and even in a lot of the Japanese versions they spend a lot of time involving and interweaving humans into the storyline; and IMO they did a good job of that here (even with a few surprises here and there) that I thought were okay.
I like that the buildup in the story took years (not hours or days); and all the characters motivations were plausible. I didn't expect the father who believed something more was going on after the loss of his wife to actually die so early in the film, for example. I thought he'd be there in the end.
I also like the new take that the H Bomb tests didn't create Godzilla per se; more that 'deep exploration' of the oceans 'awakened' him, and once the U.S. and U.S.S.R. were both sure it wasn't 'the other side' -- all the various atomic bomb tests of the 1950ies and 1960ies (with progressively bigger yields) were attempts to kill him, that failed.
I liked all the 'Easter Eggs' too - like the atomic plant having 'Jira' in it's name and being referred to as 'the Jira plant' (Godzilla in the original 1954 Japanese version - sans Raymond Burr - was actually first named 'Gojira'.); and they had the tracking target on the various map displays designated as 'Gojira'.
I also liked some of the humor -- such as the name for the giant insect creature (that they soon learned could also fly) was:
Massively Unidentified Terrestrial Object aka MUTO; butwhen they see it can fly, the Admiral makes the comment:
"We call it Massively Unidentified Terrestrial Object or MUTO..." and as he's watching it sprout new wings and fly off..."that is obviously...no...longer...terrestrial..."
I can understand why some people may not like it; but for me, it worked overall as it was a Godzilla film in the mold of the Japanese Godzilla film template; and I thought they did a good job with both the motivations of all the creatures (they weren't all just mindless monsters on a rampage); as well as the human characters (although, yeah, the fact the son just happened to be a nuclear ordinance disposal officer in the U.S. Navy - and that's JUST what they needed at one point in the film, was rather convenient

.)
In the end, yes, I thought it could have used a little more 'Godzilla time' on the screen; and I was disappointed that with all the other nods to the previous Godzilla films they had, they never once worked something of the original/iconic 'Godzilla' theme music into any of the new film's score.