Just got back from seeing it, and I really enjoyed it.
*SPOILERS, obviously, because obvious spoiler discussion*
Lots of moments that made me smile. I really loved the opening title sequence, getting straight into showing glimpses of Godzilla in old newsreel footage before the nuke cutting to white, then slowly fading in the "Godzilla" title was really effective I thought. I loved the buildup of tension in a lot of scenes, like the MUTO hatching and the whole Hawaii sequence culminating in Godzilla's reveal and his first roar. Serizawa naming Godzilla for the first time as "Gojira", and the reverence with which they talked about him (the "is this him?" bit at the start for example was one of many nice touches that really gave you a feel for how this wasn't just some random creature, but something special).
I loved that Godzilla had personality, and I was actually surprised by how much of an outright hero the movie portrayed him to be. He never once targeted humans or the military, to the point where the Navy was basically
escorting him to San Francisco at one point, and any time it looked like he might collide with a ship he dived to avoid them. I'm sure some people might not like that he was portrayed in such a positive light when so many of the film makers have been referring back to the original film as their source of inspiration for this new film and maybe weren't expecting him to be more akin to the Showa superhero-type of Godzilla, but I really liked it.
The Muto's were cool as well, and I liked how they were both slightly different. I suspected from the falling jets in the trailers that they probably had some sort of EMP attack (I've been avoiding anything even remotely related to the leak script because I didn't want to know any of that sort of stuff beforehand), so it was cool to see they weren't just big monsters but had special attacks like a lot of classic kaiju do.
And yes, Godzilla's beam attack!

Another smiley moment, I was so wrapped up in the film I'd forgotten that we hadn't seen it yet; and then the screen started glowing blue. That was a really cool moment. I do agree that the thinner beam did perhaps make it look a bit weak/not as "beefy" as the classic one often has, but it was still just great to see, and firing the beam right into the female Muto's throat was a great final move. Didn't that old Terry Rossio/Ted Elliot script end with Godzilla decapitating the Gryphon in San Francisco too? Either way, a cool finish that's different to anything we've seen before.
Visually I thought he looked great as well, and pretty much all the little nitpicks I had with the design weren't even an issue actually seeing him in motion. The feet you only see that one time in the airport scene, I'd forgotten he was even maybe supposed to have gills (not that that ever really bothered me anyway because they were pretty subtle), and there were really only a couple of shots where I thought he still looked a little wide, but overall he looked great. Seeing all those unused alternate designs from the art book definitely shows they went with the right one in the end.
I also just loved how much it "felt" like a Godzilla movie beyond the obvious. Lots of cool military action, Japanese locations, jungles, an airport scene, so much of it just felt
right. It was good stuff.
As for criticisms, I largely agree with most of Jorzilla's points (though my mind never once wandered back to Jurassic Park, except for during some of the shots like the ones from inside the school bus which reminded me of how Spielberg kept the camera inside the vehicle during most of the opening part of the T-Rex scene). The human characters were pretty underdeveloped, and it's a shame Bryan Cranston dropped out of the movie fairly early on, as he felt like a stronger lead than ATJ, plus there was more family stuff I felt like they could have utilised between the two of them but didn't because they killed Cranston off. I guess they just figured that once Johnson went off to protect/disarm the nuke that they wouldn't be able to have much interaction anyway, but it was still a shame to lose such a strong actor. I liked Ken Watanabe's Serizawa, and as mentioned earlier he really was the "voice" of Godzilla in a way. I liked the scene between him and David Strathairn where he showed him the watch and you immediately understood his feeling on nuclear weapons and why he was reluctant to go along with the military's plan. We could have done with more of that sort of stuff.
I also thought they really took it down to the wire with giving Godzilla enough screen time. Any less and it would have been a real problem, but I felt like ultimately there was just enough -
just. I think less people would have had a problem with it if they didn't majorly cock-tease us with two epic battles that we then never see. The airport scene is built up fantastically, and Godzilla's reveal is great. Then, just when the fight is about to start, it cuts away and other than a couple of brief shots on a TV, there's no fight. Then when Godzilla and the Mutos finally reach San Francisco, they do the same thing
again, cutting away just as the fight begins, and then when you see the city later it's nighttime and half of it is on fire. I was honestly worried they were going to pull it a third time when Godzilla distracted the Mutos from their nest and they went off to fight, only for the focus to stay on the soldiers.
I love movies like Alien and Jaws where the title creatures don't actually get a whole lot of screen time between them, but I think the
way they handle several of the "not showing too much" scenes here is what's bothering people. I was fine with not seeing Godzilla himself for so long into the film because we still got that very cool Muto hatching scene as well as its initial attack on Hawaii and EMP'ing the jet and stuff, plus just the cool buildup (the completely kaiju-free Janjira scene was great and I loved the tense buildup and Bryan Cranston's reaction when the trapped people started banging on the door only to then see his wife) but the constant cutting away from major scenes right as an epic battle is about to start definitely irked me.
Oh yeah and they really did get me for a moment with wondering whether or not they'd really killed off Godzilla at the end. Since they'd established that he was just one of a race of ancient creatures just like him, I wondered if they were just going to kill this one then have another one take his place in any sequels, since they'd kept referencing the original 1954 film so much during the promotion of this. Definitely another 'moment o' smiling' when he started breathing again and opened his eyes, and Serizawa smiled.

Then the news footage with the "King of the Monsters" title in it. Great stuff (though I was a little surprised we didn't get any sort of shots of anyone telling David Strathairn's character that Godzilla was still alive and asking whether or not he wanted them to open fire on him or something, given that they were fully intending to kill Godzilla with the nuke as well, and then him saying "no" when it became clear that he was leaving the city and walking back out into the bay).
And
that is one of the reasons I try to avoid spoilers like leaked scripts. That scene wouldn't have been nearly as satisfying if I hadn't doubted for a minute whether or not he was dead, nor the feels so strong if I'd known before I even walked into the cinema that he didn't die at the end.
I generally suck at rating things, but I'll go with 8 out of 10 for this one. Not perfect and with room for improvement in the sequel should we be lucky enough to get one, but a great start and a lot of fun. They did the big guy proud.