Well, I find that for me, the kinds of colors you get depend on two things... Most importantly the brand and model of film. And then a combo of your exposure vs the developer you use.
I tend to get softer pastels and purples/pinks when I use expired Fuji films. And my Kodaks almost always go crazy bright green, especially the expired E100 stuff.
You can affect change in the results by filtering the shots, exposing differently, and developing longer. How this change works will again depend on the film, it's age and brand and type.
Also, what you are shooting is relevant. Example would be, if you go out into the woods and shoot a bunch of Kodak E100 and the woods are full of green leaves, your shots are going to be bright green to an overwhelming degree. If you use a color filter, you can change this to some degree but what color you use and how much is really a matter of trying it and seeing what you get.
If you are Ok with some post-processing in Photoshop or Lightroom, you can fix the colors and mute down the crazy greens. I typically don't do as much of that myself and leave them how they are. I do like to punch up the contrast some, but if it's bright green, I figure it's that way for a reason.
😀
I've used an assortment of Kodak C/R films and I almost always get the heavy bright green vibe to them. So I would expect your Kodak film will do similar.
For comparison... here is a shot from a roll of expired Kodak E100G...
Turkey Mountain by
alienmeatsack, on Flickr
And then in comparison, tint/tone wise...
This was shot using expired Fuji Provia and the tone/vibe is completely different...
Untitled by
alienmeatsack, on Flickr
I think your results will tend to be towards the top shot.