I've never done it before on the car, but think you can. Just pickup one of the cheap bench bleeder kits which is just a couple of adapters and some hose. If not sure how to do it, look it up on Youtube since I think there are videos on the process. If worst comes to worst, you can easily unbolt it from the booster and bleed in a vice.
Were it me, after bleeding the MC I would hook it up to the lines and gravitiy Bleed out all 4 corners and then pressure bleed all 4 going from RR to LR to RF and finishing at LR wheel. Pickup a couple of Qts of brake Fluid so you have enough and at least your system will have Fresh Clean fluid AND do not let the fluid in the resevoir get so low you let air in again or you NEED TO START OVER.
If you are SURE you've done it all the above correctly and still have no pressure, then I would be thinking a new MC. But again......Bleeding is critical to your brake system.
EDIT - OOPS, realized I had the last wheel wrong but most would see that. When bleeding you want to end at the wheel closest to the MC which is the LF and not the LR as I mistakingly said up top. What can I say....it was a typo :>) I will also add as fred mentions below, just take off the MC (only 2 bolts and lines are disconnected anyway) and Bleed it on a bench/Vice. If you've come this far yourself, it really is not difficult to bleed the MC, there are plenty of short vids on youtube showing the process.