Your shell was trying to run an interpreter called "perl\r". If you want a quickie demo, create a symlink in the directory where the script resides with the following command:
ln -s `which perl` `echo -ne "perl\r"`
Now change the shebang line to invoke perl via the symlink in the current directory, being careful not to remove the carriage return:
#!./perl
Invoke your script and the shell will exec perl via the "perl\r" symlink without complaint.
Update: I should add the magic incantation to remove the nasty symlink:
rm `echo -ne "perl\r"`
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