If there really is a shortage of good contemporary epic, I see this less as a democratic problem, a crisis of cynicism, or a difficulty in adapting realism to the epic so much as there's been a trend in serious literature toward internalization of conflict. The characters in a traditional epic tend to be men of action who externalize conflict, battling monsters and other heroes. These days, what passes for good writing is bloodless, ineffectual, effete males struggling with their souls.
I didn't like The Odyssey when I read it but I got how other people would. The whole thing is like an action blockbuster of the ancient world with over the top fight sequences, and larger than life machismo, testosterone pumping, bragging, boxing, sword swinging demigods. That type of character really only gets used in pulp or genre fiction these days. I don't just mean fantasy and science fiction. I bemoan the fate of some of our nation's greatest heroes, destined to be passed around by hacks writing for a juvenile audience. Bat and the Man I Sing, anyone?
However, and I know I'm reversing myself here, I would be interested in reading an epic with a completely internalized conflict, just to see how it could be done.
I may be over stretching myself here, but since epyllia have already been mentioned, what does everybody think of mock epics?

