We investigate the hydrodynamic response of plasma gradients during the interaction with ultraintense energetic laser pulses, using kinetic particle simulations. Energetic laser pulses are capable of compressing preformed plasma gradients over short times while accelerating low-density plasma backwards. As light is absorbed on a steepened interface, hot-electron temperature and coupling efficiency drop below the ponderomotive scaling, and we are left with a new absorption mechanism that strongly relies on the electrostatic potential caused by low-density preformed plasma. We describe this process, explain electron spectra, and identify the parameter regime where strong compression occurs. Finally, we discuss the implications for fast ignition and other applications.