Well Frankenstein did have a bride and the movie was incredibly gothic.
But that is just my opinion. I would take out on C.
"A Sound of Thunder" Bradbury employs metaphor, simile, parallelism, irony, and paradox. In the exposition of the story Bradbury writes in metaphor and simile, using parallelism to enhance the poetic quality of his diction: ... Time doesn't present that kind of mess," a foreshadowing of the story's end.
The last one has parallel sentence structure. What that means is that the verbs in the sentence have the same structure (in this case "she plays/sleeps" - they both end in -s). You might also notice that if you read them all out loud, the other three sound somewhat strange.